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Stolen Lives: A Jade de Jong Investigation…
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Stolen Lives: A Jade de Jong Investigation Set in South Africa (A PI Jade de Jong Novel) (edizione 2011)

di Jassy Mackenzie (Autore)

Serie: Jade de Jong (2)

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
435584,675 (3.97)7
Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

A seemingly simple bodyguard job plunges Jade de Jong into the world of strip joints, sex workers, and human trafficking.

When wealthy Pamela Jordaan hires PI Jade de Jong as a bodyguard after her husband Terence disappears, Jade thinks keeping an eye on this anxious wife will be an easy way to earn some cash. But when a determined shooter nearly kills them both and Jade finds Terence horrifically tortured and barely alive, she realizes that she has been drawn into a wicked game.

At the same time, her relationship with police superintendent David Patel is on the rocks, and things only get more complicated when his son is kidnapped and his wife is blackmailed. It soon becomes clear that the kidnapping and the attempted killings of Pamela and her husband are tied to a human trafficking ring that stretches from Johannesburg to London.

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… (altro)
Utente:skipstern
Titolo:Stolen Lives: A Jade de Jong Investigation Set in South Africa (A PI Jade de Jong Novel)
Autori:Jassy Mackenzie (Autore)
Info:Soho Crime (2011), 288 pages
Collezioni:La tua biblioteca
Voto:****
Etichette:foreign-translated, crime-detective

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Stolen Lives di Jassy Mackenzie

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Mostra 5 di 5
P.I. Jade de Jong is hired as a bodyguard by a woman, whose husband disappears from their home. As it turns out, he is the owner of strip clubs, who has been involved in human trafficking. Jade and is found tortured almost to death. The human smugglers are trapped in South Africa and trying to arrange passports to escape, resulting in the kidnapping of David Patel's (Jade's ex-lover) young son. Good taut plot about vengeance. Looking forward to reading book #3. ( )
  skipstern | Jul 11, 2021 |
During a raid on a brothel in the London suburbs, the Human Trafficking team of Scotland Yard, unearth a nest of young teenage girls from South Africa. By following a lead from a seriously beaten young girl as to a friend that was abducted and sold into private slavery the British police engage in a joint operation with their counter-parts in Johannesburg.
Mackenzie, a journalist living is South Africa, has concocted a fine thriller featuring private investigator/bodyguard Jade De Jong. Recently out of her on again off again relationship with police detective, David Patel, Jade takes what looks to be a cushy assignment watching over Pamela Jordaan, whose husband has disappeared. However when within the first hour of driving he charge an attempt is made on Pamela’s life Jade discovers that she is in for long hard haul. Pamela’s husband, a brothel owner and trafficker in people, “the third most lucrative criminal activity in the world” has many enemies. When they discover his maimed and tortured body and his daughter, who was also involved in the ‘family business’, is discovered missing Jade teams back up, in and out of bed, with Patel to discover who was responsible for shipping these young girls out to parts unknown.
Other mysterious forces are at work as the back story builds solidly to catch up with the flow of the human traffic and Mackenzie does a grand job of guiding us expertly through this dangerous world and then dropping us in the middle of mix in an effort to gather clues, along with the police investigators, to find the missing heiress of the Jo’burg porn world and discover which of the players are lying as we are left twisting and grasping at straws as the novel explodes in the final few pages.
This, not to be missed debut novel, will entertain, enthrall and enlighten and all at lightning speed.
( )
  MarkPSadler | Jan 17, 2016 |
This review was first published in Belletrista.

Jassy Mackenzie's sequel to her 2010 Random Violence is simultaneously more engaging and less so than its predecessor. The series' protagonist is Jade de Jong: a young, South African private investigator who has lived as an expatriate for many years following the murder of her famous police inspector father and who has returned to South Africa at the behest of a friend, also a police inspector.

Overall, I enjoyed that first book. There was a raw vividness to it that distinguished it from other series of the female private investigator subgenre. My quibbles with it were that the plot was structured a bit awkwardly, requiring a small amount of suspension of disbelief, and that the villain had a whiff of caricature Hollywood Slasher Psycho rather than coming across as 100% Real Sadist. However, Mackenzie got both of those fixed in this time around. The human trafficking story line of Stolen Lives shifted smoothly up through the gears, never causing me to raise my head and say, "Hmmm…I dunno…" Jade's antagonists are appropriately repellent without stepping over the line to become clichés. My opinion is that one book's worth of practice made Mackenzie a noticeably better mystery writer.

On the other hand, some of the complexity of Jade's character has been toned down. In the first book, she was an intriguing character: she admired her father and was anxious to partner with the police to solve the crimes; yet, she was planning a bit of murder on her own. The disparity between her two selves—moreover, her concern that she was actually okay with this disparity—separated her from the run-of-the-mill series detective. In Stolen Lives, this turmoil seems to have drained away. Somewhere in the interval between the two books, Jade has accepted her dual nature, regretting only the problems it causes in her love life. In fact, in a subplot twist at the end of this book, it appears that Jade's killer side might become somewhat of a signature hook for future stories. I like these formulaic approaches less than I do the complexity of character.

These are not books for the squeamish. Mackenzie has a talent for giving you a brutal picture of the underside of life, whether it's the actions of a sadist in the first book or the reality of what happens to trafficked women in this novel. It's not unrelenting violence; the moments are intermittent but, when they occur, they are telling. They form part of her larger perspective that gives (assuming it's accurate) a thoughtful glimpse into the wild and contradictory nature of post-apartheid South Africa. Her stories have an element of social consciousness to them that caused me to engage more than I might have with just a suspense novel.

This series has three things going for it: competent plot lines, an intriguing protagonist, and a perspective into modern South African society. The first is sine qua non for any series that expects to have some longevity. The third, perhaps, may be of more interest to non-South African readers for whom it might be unfamiliar—but the majority of readers worldwide fall into that category. The future of the second aspect is likely to determine whether the series becomes one where the next book is highly anticipated or only something that will be picked up casually if you happen to notice it has come out. If Mackenzie can keep Jade from becoming a formulaic Willing to Walk the Dark Side for Justice character and keep her rich and complex, Jade will be a character worth following. For now, I'm anticipating the third episode, The Fallen (Worse Case in South Africa), due out next April. ( )
1 vota TadAD | Sep 2, 2011 |
Completed 5/10, a two day read, 4 1/2 stars. A very good book, 2nd in the series and a good follow-up to the first, Random Violence. This is also a very interesting, well paced story, dealing mostly with human trafficking. But it is told with more focus than other books on what happens to the women whose lives are stolen, and the violence behind prostitution. The heroine Jade manages to survive, and this story just as the first goes back to her roots. And it raises again the baggage her policeman lover carries, namely a separated wife and young son. This story also introduces a police team in the UK working the same case, sharing info with the Jo'burg team. Stolen Lives flaws are relatively minor - I don't care for a heroine who executes criminal, no matter how evil, and no matter how different Jo'burg is from my world. And this family business with the boyfriend has to get resolved quickly, or it will bring the whole series down to a soap opera. Looking forward to #3. ( )
  maneekuhi | May 10, 2011 |
October 14 London

STOLEN LIVES opens with a raid on a brothel in London. It isn’t a success because Salimovic, the owner, and his female partner get away but Detective Constable Edmonds knows the raid accomplished something important. “…she approached the bed…. A black girl lay there, eyes wide and terrified. She was on her side, her slender arms wrapped tightly around her legs, and Edmonds saw with a jolt that she was naked. She glanced around the room for something to cover her with, but there was nothing suitable in the small space. Nothing at all.” Edmonds and her partner, Inspector Richards of the Human Trafficking Department in Scotland Yard, know there are few big victories in their line of work, but little victories add up and a small disruption can save a young woman’s life.

Johannesburg October 25

Terence Jordaan is in bed with one of his many girl friends. Terence is the owner of a chain of strip clubs called Heads and Tails and his work provides him with as many willing women as chooses to have. The woman who chooses to stay away from him is his wife. She is not in the house that night when all the security is breached and Terence is taken away.

The next day, Pamela Jordaan contacts Jade de Jong, wanting to hire her as a body guard. Pamela has known police Superintendent David Patel since they were children. David has give Pamela Jade’s name because Pamela wants the best and is willing to pay for it. Pamela is convinced that she is in danger from the same people who kidnapped her husband. Terence has made a great deal of money going beyond operating strip clubs; Terence is involved in the trafficking of young women through South Africa and Britain. When an attempt is made on Pamela’s life, Jade commits to protecting Pamela. Her husband has made very dangerous enemies.

Lindewe Mtwetwa is a link in a chain that provides bogus documentation to people who need false passports and identity cards to get out of South Africa. She has good contacts at the office of Home Affairs until, suddenly, no one is returning her calls and documents she has promised to some very nasty people aren’t available. Lindewe cannot know that David Patel’s wife, Naisha, has just taken over the office of Home Affairs and has immediately begun a campaign to clean up the department, especially the sale of false documents. Much more than Lindewe’s considerable income is at stake here.

STOLEN LIVES is two more stories, all four woven together to show that stealing a person’s life is as easy as crushing a bug. Money breeds money and, in these stories, the acquisition of money has crushed any conscience that might have once lingered in the psyche’s of the men and women who traffic in the lives of the desperately poor who think a job at a place like Heads and Tails is the way out of poverty for themselves and their families.

Jassy Mackenzie has written a story that is tight; so tight that even a little information can be too much information and ruin the impact of the story. Johannesburg is a very dangerous city. The rich live behind high walls topped with barbed wire. They live in gated communities, in homes with the best security systems money can buy. Magnificent homes are prisons, the residents hiding behind steel doors and barred windows. Even in communities protected by gates, individual homes are protected by more gates and most residents have huts at their driveways, shelter for the round-the-clock guards who are encouraged to shoot before asking questions. The poor live in a state of poverty beyond anything that can be imagined in the United States. Life is cheap in Johannesburg and it is a perfect place for trafficking in sex slaves because each who falls into the trap believes that, eventually, she will join the rich behind walls in another gated community. Poverty steals rational thought; it is those who use the poor who steal their hope.

There is violence in STOLEN LIVES but it reflects the brutality of the characters who engage in sexual slavery. For a person to engage in the trafficking of human beings, they must have willingly given up their own humanity. David Patel is an uncomplicated man caught in a complicated relationship. He loves his wife and his son but he also loves Jade, someone he has known for most of his life. Jade, on the other hand, is a very complicated woman. Jade can kill and has done so, creating a barrier between herself and David. She is a reflection of Johannesburg, a beautiful city shadowed by violence and its history. Johannesburg has secrets and so does Jade.

STOLEN LIVES is an excellent follow-up to the first book in the series, RANDOM VIOLENCE. The evil in the first book is deadening because it is unpredictable. The evil in STOLEN LIVES isn’t unpredictable. The core of the story is the trafficking in human beings and there is nothing more evil than that. Not everyone gets what they deserve. ( )
  macabr | May 4, 2011 |
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Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

A seemingly simple bodyguard job plunges Jade de Jong into the world of strip joints, sex workers, and human trafficking.

When wealthy Pamela Jordaan hires PI Jade de Jong as a bodyguard after her husband Terence disappears, Jade thinks keeping an eye on this anxious wife will be an easy way to earn some cash. But when a determined shooter nearly kills them both and Jade finds Terence horrifically tortured and barely alive, she realizes that she has been drawn into a wicked game.

At the same time, her relationship with police superintendent David Patel is on the rocks, and things only get more complicated when his son is kidnapped and his wife is blackmailed. It soon becomes clear that the kidnapping and the attempted killings of Pamela and her husband are tied to a human trafficking ring that stretches from Johannesburg to London.

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