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Miami Massacre (The Executioner) Kindle Edition
A sniper trained in the jungles of Vietnam, Mack Bolan is the kind of vigilante hero “who would make Jack Reacher think twice” (Empireonline.com). Unleashing his vengeance coast to coast, Bolan is waging a very personal war on organized crime. Now, with a cadre of Cuban revolutionaries on his side, it’s time for a hurricane called the Executioner to blindside Miami.
Bolan had planned to fight his way across the country, taking out branches of the syndicate one by one. Then comes a break Bolan never dreamed of: All of his enemies have assembled in the Sunshine State to finalize the elimination of the Executioner. For Bolan, the mob’s Miami summit is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to destroy the entire Mafia with one single blow.
“Don Pendleton’s anti-hero is just as powerful in the world of publishing as he is in the dark alleys of any crime-infested urban hell” (NYBooktime). With more than two hundred millions copies of the Executioner books sold since its phenomenal debut, the iconic action series is still inspiring artists today. Gerry Conway, cocreator of the Marvel Comics series, The Punisher, credits the series for “[giving] me the idea for the lone, slightly psychotic avenger.” Currently in production as a major motion picture, the Executioner still blows away the competition.
Miami Massacre is the 4th book in the Executioner series, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOpen Road Media Mystery & Thriller
- Publication dateDecember 16, 2014
- File size6.8 MB
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Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Don Pendleton (1927-1995) was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. At the age of fourteen, during World War II, he enlisted in the Navy, serving until 1947 as a Radioman. He returned to active Naval duty during the Korean Conflict. Following the war he worked as a railroad telegrapher, CAA/FAA air traffic control specialist, and aerospace engineer. In the latter career, he worked as a senior engineer for Martin-Marietta's Titan ICBM programs and as an engineering administrator in NASA's Apollo Moonshot program. He published his first short story in 1957 and his first novel in 1961. Leaving his aerospace career behind, Don turned to full time writing in 1967, produced a number of mystery, science fiction, and futuristic novels, a screenplay, and numerous poems, short stories, and essays.
Product details
- ASIN : B00OYMPC6W
- Publisher : Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller (December 16, 2014)
- Publication date : December 16, 2014
- Language : English
- File size : 6.8 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 219 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #250,783 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #792 in Crime Action Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #1,044 in Crime Action & Adventure
- #1,829 in Vigilante Justice Thrillers
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Don Pendleton (1927-1995) was born in Little Rock, Arkansas. At the age of fourteen, during World War II, he enlisted in the Navy, serving until 1947 as a Radioman. He returned to active Naval duty during the Korean Conflict. Following the war he worked as a railroad telegrapher, CAA/FAA air traffic control specialist, and aerospace engineer. In the latter career, he worked as a senior engineer for Martin-Marietta's Titan ICBM programs and as an engineering administrator in NASA's Apollo Moonshot program. He published his first short story in 1957 and his first novel in 1961. Leaving his aerospace career behind, Don turned to full time writing in 1967, produced a number of mystery, science fiction and futuristic novels, a screenplay, and numerous poems, short stories and essays.
In 1969, War Against the Mafia, featuring Mack Bolan, the Executioner, was published. The phenomenal success of the first novel led to thirty-seven sequels over the next twelve years. Dozens of imitators, inspired by Pendleton's success, arose during the 1970's to constitute a new particularly American literary genre and the term Action/Adventure coined by Pendleton himself, has since spread to encompass television and motion picture formats as well. The original best-selling Executioner novels have been translated in more than thirty languages with in-print figures of more than 200 million copies worldwide. Pendleton franchised "Don Pendleton's Mack Bolan" to Harlequin's Gold Eagle Books in 1980, and more than 900 books based on the Executioner and spin-offs--Phoenix Force, Able Team, Stony Man, Mack Bolan, Super Bolan, have been published under their continuing program.
In December, 2014, Open Road Media released 37 ebooks of the original Don Pendleton's The Executioner. Mack Bolan's war against the mafia begins again.
As of October 11, 2016, Open Road Media is putting War Against the Mafia, Death Squad, and Battle Mask, books 1, 2, and 3, into print.
In November 2018, an Executioner short story written by Don Pendleton in 1978, "Willing to Kill, The Executioner: Mack Bolan Short Story", with an Introduction by Don's widow, Linda Pendleton, was published in ebook and print by Pendleton Artists.
Don's more recent works include a series of six mystery novels based the exploits of Joe Copp, Private Eye, and another six mystery novels based on the character, Ashton Ford, Psychic Detective. Both series are in print, Kindle, and in audiobooks.
Don turned to nonfiction in 1990, and with his wife, Linda, produced To Dance With Angels, a definitive study of life after death and spirit communication. Published in hardcover by Kensington, it had four editions. Linda wrote a new Introduction and put the latest edition into print and Kindle. Don and Linda also co-wrote Whispers From the Soul, available now in audiobook, print and Kindle.
Don's last novel was Roulette: The Search for the Sunrise Killer, co-written with Linda Pendleton, and is available in Print, Kindle, and audiobook.
Together, Don and Linda, adapted and scripted The Executioner, War Against the Mafia, to Comic graphic novel format, which was published in 1993. Following Don's death, Linda adapted and scripted the second Executioner novel, Death Squad, published in 1996 by Vivid Comics.
His last nonfiction books are A Search for Meaning From the Surface of a Small Planet; and The Metaphysics of the Novel and a Novelist by Don Pendleton with Linda Pendleton, a book for aspiring writers. Recently Linda published a collection of Don's Metaphysical writings: The Cosmic Breath: Metaphysical Essays of Don Pendleton. Also published was Soul Expressions: Poetry Collection Linda Pendleton and Don Pendleton.
In 2012, Don's science fiction was republished for Kindle and Print: The Guns of Terra 10; The Godmakers; and The Olympians. The three books are also available in a Kindle box set.
Don was a long time member of the Authors Guild; Authors League of America; Writer's Guild of America, West; Past West Coast Director of Mystery Writers of America; International Platform Association; and a frequent speaker on campus and writers' symposiums.
Don Pendleton published more than 125 books in his career. For biographical reference and bibliography on Don Pendleton, see:
Twentieth Century Crime and Mystery Writers, (St. Martin Press); Contemporary Authors (Gale); Queen's Edition, Dictionary of International Biography (Melrose - London, England); Murder Ink (Workman); Who's Who in the Midwest.
Official Don Pendleton websites: http://www.donpendleton.com
http://www.executionerseries.com
Photo of Don Pendleton by Linda Pendleton.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers enjoy the book's action-packed story, with one review specifically praising Don Pendleton's writing style. They find it a fun read, with one customer noting it's perfect for escapist reading.
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Customers enjoy the action-packed story of the book, with one customer specifically praising Don Pendleton's writing style.
"...All in all, what merited this five stars from me was the need to keep turning the page...." Read more
"Lots of action in this one. Solid work. Looking forward to the next one. An awesome story. Mack Bolan is one of the best characters out there." Read more
"I enjoyed reading the series. It is well written and I highly recommend it. Once I started it I kept going until it was finished." Read more
"Lots of action from Don Pendleton with these Mack Bolan books. Plots are similar, punish the Mafia for his family...." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a fun and engaging read, with one customer particularly appreciating the protagonist's vigilantism.
"...Overall, however, Miami Massacre is a fun read, and begins the "round the globe" trend of these titles to go from one easily recognizable locale to..." Read more
"Lots of action in this one. Solid work. Looking forward to the next one. An awesome story. Mack Bolan is one of the best characters out there." Read more
"I enjoyed reading the series. It is well written and I highly recommend it. Once I started it I kept going until it was finished." Read more
"...All in all, fun book to read about his vigilantism." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2023Miami Massacre picks up shortly after Battle Mask, with Mack Bolan in Phoenix, hunting down remnants of the Mafia family he decimated over the course of Death Squad and Battle Mask. He gets a tip that leads him to Miami, and shortly thereafter, the Bolan blitz is on.
I really think that War Against the Mafia and Death Squad were Pendleton finding his voice and style. Battle Mask and Miami Massacre are where it's readily recognizable as the prototypical story that inspired later authors in the series such as Michael Newton, Chuck Rogers, and Douglas P. Wojtowicz, the man who taught me how to write.
It was also surprisingly progressive for its time, with Margarita being an actual shooter that gets some rather than simply a sexy lamp for Bolan to pass the time. The operative words here are "for its time"; there's stuff that wouldn't fly in 2023, though I considered it through a 1970s lens to gauge it. Additionally, "Love me, Mock" made me roll my eyes and snicker. That definitely wouldn't fly nowadays.
That said, in comparison to the Executioners I read from the early to mid-1990s, it's a how-to for men on writing female characters...
All in all, what merited this five stars from me was the need to keep turning the page. I don't think I've had this much excitement reading an Executioner novel since the days of first discovering Mike Newton in A Dying Evil and reading Doug's debut Executioner book, Blood Trade. I'm looking forward to completing the remainder of the original 38 novels!
- Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2015After smashing up the DiGeorge family in BATTLE MASK, Bolan begins to hammer into the Mafia in the Southwest, only to follow his targets to a "summit meeting" of the Families in Miami. During his reconnoiter, he runs into "Toro", a Cuban exile and freedom fighter, who saves Bolan's bacon after a particularly successful assault leaves Bolan surrounded by the cops. Impressed with the fervor of the freedom fighters' cause, Bolan leaves the band of exiles headed by Toro, but only after giving them a satchel filled with stolen Mafia cash and - *boggle* - a 40mm Gatling gun that Bolan refers to as a "Honeywell".
Gun nerds, as far as I can tell Honeywell didn't make a Gatling-style grenade launcher, although they did build one that was automatic, so perhaps this is just an example of Pendleton getting his research wires crossed a little bit. In addition, Bolan shows off his "16/79", an M-16 with an underslung M79 grenade launcher (which is, in actuality, an M203). Since the M203 was only developed in 1969, about a year before this was written, it does show that Pendleton was keeping his eye out for any new military technologies he could work into the series.
Anyway, Bolan begins digging around again, and finds where the Mafia "summit" is holed up. Using his 16/79, he launches a one-man artillery barrage of grenades and high-velocity lead, pulverizing the Mafia hardsite and killing or wounding dozens. The Mafia goons try to go after him, but of course, they are woefully unprepared to take on a guy of Bolan's caliber. There is no end body count for this book, but it is no doubt absurdly high, and actually one of the reasons I'm shaving a star off this review. Bolan's body count in this book is downright ludicrous, and unfortunately, sets the precedent for the rest of the Executioner's career - he's a guy who occasionally gets winged by the bad guys, but kills hundreds - nay, Thousands - over the course of his career. While the gunplay in the first few books feels more realistic, in Miami Massacre, Bolan is a foreshadowing of '80s style action heroes who walk through veritable walls of lead unscathed, but drop bad guys with practically every trigger pull.
The other reason I'm dinging this book a star is the subplot involving the "soldada", a young female freedom fighter who falls in love with Bolan in about an hour, sexes him up, then follows him back to Miami, only to get wounded, captured, tortured, and killed by the Mafia. While this "woman in a fridge" trope (to use the Comic Book critic's term) is more excusable in a book written over forty years ago, we see here the beginning of a pattern that runs through many of the Bolan books - young sexpot falls in love with Bolan almost instantly, follows along with him despite Bolan's protestations, and inevitably gets kidnapped/wounded/killed by the bad guys. Sure, it is done with the intention of helping show how dangerous it is to be one of Bolan's allies - and the same fate befalls many men as well - but it will come off as a bit unpalatable to today's readers.
Overall, however, Miami Massacre is a fun read, and begins the "round the globe" trend of these titles to go from one easily recognizable locale to another, lending an interesting backdrop to what could otherwise become an all too boring formula of cat-and-mouse.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 30, 2024Lots of action in this one. Solid work. Looking forward to the next one. An awesome story. Mack Bolan is one of the best characters out there.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 5, 2024I enjoyed reading the series. It is well written and I highly recommend it. Once I started it I kept going until it was finished.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 4, 2021ok
- Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2023Lots of action from Don Pendleton with these Mack Bolan books. Plots are similar, punish the Mafia for his family. Along the way he meets many who he helps and they help him as well. All in all, fun book to read about his vigilantism.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2024I was in the Army at the time and the Nolan series of adventures were a bright spot in my father dull world. A few moments of escapism at the end of duty or training. This book is one of the best as Mack finds some allies in an unexpected place. I remembered the sacrifice of the lady protecting Mack's flank now 50 + years after I first read this book. It is an entertaining book.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2021I love these stories where the good guy kills all the bad guys. It’s a repeatable storyline, book after book but I don’t care. The guy has a bone to pick after he finds out the mafia killed most of his family. So he makes it his own life’s mission to wipe them out wherever they exist.
He must do this while avoiding hurting innocent civilians and never a cop. So some police are fans of Bolan, (quietly of course), and others feverishly are trying to capture or kill him.
Most of these books were written long ago where there wasn’t much technology like cell phones, computers, and internet. Movies and books seem to idolize the mafia as semi good guys. When they prey on innocent people and murder on any whim or perceived slight that moves them, proves the opposite. That’s where Mack comes in, he squashes these bugs like the cockroaches they are. He also bangs a hot chick in each book.
I’m reviewing all Kindle books and they are pretty well edited but not perfect. I found a few errors but it’s not bad or irritating. Enjoy.
Top reviews from other countries
- Michael MorfittReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 12, 2021
5.0 out of 5 stars Enjoying reading this series again
First read The Executioner books back in the 70s, enjoyed reading them then and enjoying them again
- Walter E. KurtzReviewed in Canada on May 24, 2015
4.0 out of 5 stars Bolan continues to kill gangsters, but this time in Miami
This is the fourth book in the Executioner series. This review assumes that the reader is familiar with the character of Mack Bolan, the super vigilante known as the “Executioner.” Although reading the first three books in the series is not really necessary to understand this one, it would be helpful. Besides, these are pretty good books.
Miami Massacre picks up few weeks after the end of Battle Mask. Apparently, following the events of the previous book, Bolan went to Phoenix where he started doing what he does best—i.e. killing Mafia gangsters. The book begins with him being attacked by a Mafia hit squad. He quickly kills them all and then visits the house of the local Mafia boss. Of course, by “visits” I mean that he goes there and kills every Mafioso he can get his hands on.
But the boss himself is not there; he had left for Miami where a big Mafia convention is about to take place. Twelve of the most important godfathers from all around United States are about to meet to talk business and, amongst other things, decide how to deal with the Mack Bolan problem.
This is a too good target to pass on.
And so Bolan goes to Miami and starts killing the gangsters, starting with the man who escaped him back in Phoenix. I won’t go over all the twists and turns, but along the way there are some assassinations and gun battles before the final big battle at the end. Actually, there are two big battles at the end and not one.
The story is overall good and solid. There is, in my opinion, a little bit more violence and less plot than in the previous books, but since these books have always been paper versions of B class action movies, it does not bother me.
I was confused about the Cubans, however. In the book Bolan meets some Cuban exiles who worship him like he was some sort of saint. Why? Why would anti-Castro guerrillas feel such admiration (bordering on worship) for an anti-Mafia vigilante?
But what had disappointed me the most was the lack of confrontation between Bolan and the Talifero brothers. In Battle Mask, Hal Brognola (who finally meets Bolan face-to-face for the first time in this book) was warning Bolan about the Talifero brothers, who are Mafia’s top enforcers and elite killers. From the sound of it, the brother are worthy adversaries who are more than capable of matching Bolan, or at least posing serious threat. Let’s face it. So far all the criminals that Bolan has been fighting have been tough men (well, mostly) in their own way, but they could never match Bolan in skill and experience. It looked like the brothers will finally put Bolan’s skills to a real test.
But the showdown for which I was waiting never happens. Bolan does have a brief fight with one of the brothers, but it is completely inconclusive. I hope that the Taliferos will return in the future, but from what I understand, the next few books in the series are about Bolan going to Europe, so it might take some time before he comes back to the United States and fights them again.
Oh well. I can wait.