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Continental Contract (The Executioner) Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 367 ratings

“Action adventure icon” Mack Bolan is about to become an American Executioner in Paris (Los Angeles Times).
 
Using the sniper skills he sharpened in the jungles of Southeast Asia, Mack Bolan has waged a personal war against organized crime. Cleaning up the states came first. Now he’s going international. While staking out Mafia activity at the Washington Dulles airport, Bolan is caught in an ambush by syndicate guards. As a cordon of police close in on the most wanted man in America, Bolan is forced to fly or die.
 
Escaping on an airliner bound for the City of Lights, Bolan meets a man who could be his mirror image. So much so, that the double is mistakenly kidnapped by the mob as he steps off the plane. To rescue this unsuspecting innocent, the Executioner is going to bring the Paris underworld to its knees. He may not speak French, but he’s fluent in the universal language of a .32.
 
With more than two hundred millions copies of the Executioner books sold to date, author Don Pendleton didn’t just create a cultural phenomenon, he “spawned a genre” that still impacts artists today (
The New York Times). Acknowledged by Gerry Conway as “[the] inspiration” for the Marvel Comics avenger, The Punisher, Mack Bolan remains “just as powerful in the world of publishing as he is in the dark alleys of any crime-infested urban hell” (NYBooktime). Currently in development as a major motion picture, the classic Executioner books pack a punch unequalled in the field of action-series adventure.

Continental Contract
is the 5th book in the Executioner series, but you may enjoy reading the series in any order.

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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 ‏ : ‎ B00OYMPCVM
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Open Road Media Mystery & Thriller (December 16, 2014)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 16, 2014
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 7.1 MB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 215 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 367 ratings

About the author

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Don Pendleton
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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

4.4 out of 5 stars
367 global ratings

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Customers find the book readable and entertaining, with plenty of action throughout.

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17 customers mention "Readability"17 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enjoyable and fun to read, with one customer noting it's a quick read.

"...tempted to ding it a star because of them, but honestly, this book is so much fun - definitely a more "fun" title than Miami Massacre - I..." Read more

"Don Pendleton has a good series with these Mack Bolan books. He’s out for justice and usually gets it completed. Kinda crazy but fun reading...." Read more

"...I'm enjoying reading through the original Pendleton novels (aka the Mafia Wars) and I'm looking forward to the next entry in the series." Read more

"Years ago I started reading the Executioner series and found it a very good read for those of who really love plenty of action." Read more

11 customers mention "Action content"11 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the action content of the book, with one customer noting it's an iconic action-adventure series that keeps moving.

"...Kinda crazy but fun reading. Quick stories with lots of shootouts. Recommend these!" Read more

"...Continental Contract, the fifth entry in Don Pendleton's iconic action-adventure series...." Read more

"The book kept moving and was. Never dull. He was always killing bad guys...." Read more

"...series and found it a very good read for those of who really love plenty of action." Read more

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 19, 2015
    Bolan finds himself boxed in by a gang of Mafia rodmen, and in order to escape, he grabs a last-minute ticket on a flight to Paris. While on the plane he's seated next to another last-minute boarder, who turns out to be Gil Martin, a Hollywood movie star, who bears more than a passing resemblance to Bolan - so much so that one of the stewardesses makes a pass at Bolan, thinking he's somehow associated with Martin, perhaps a stunt double. Bolan dodges the girl's advances, but uses this confusion to his advantage, allowing him to get through French customs easily (Bolan is wearing false facial hair, so it isn't quite so obvious who he is) while Martin gets detained by customs agents.

    However, Bolan's clever ruse backfires on Martin, who gets nabbed by the Mafia's "French Connection". Feeling bad about this, Bolan tracks down the goons to a cathouse and gets there before the car bearing Martin does. He ambushes the bad guys and saves Martin, who now knows who Bolan is, and agrees to let Bolan stay in his luxury hotel suite, while Bolan drops Martin off at the boarding house where the stewardess is staying until she returns to the states!

    Bolan winds up going back to the cathouse later and saving all the prostitutes, while "zippering" a dozen Mafia types with a little machine pistol. He's also killed a half-dozen or so with his .32 revolver - again showing how, in these early Bolan books, he wasn't always running around with Magnum-powered hardware - so within a day of being in Paris, he's killed a score of bad guys already. Again, no one can hit him, and he kills several bad guys with every squeeze of his machine pistol's trigger.

    Unfortunately, THIS plan also backfires on him, as the prostitutes are all punished for their apparent collusion with Bolan by being shipped off to wind up in some Algerian white slave sex market. When Bolan finds out about this, he declares he'll kill one high-ranking French criminal an hour, every hour, until the girls are returned. Aiding him in this quest is Cici, "the most beautiful woman in France", who is apparently a world-famous French actress who tried bedding Gil Martin by laying in wait in his luxury hotel suite, and finding Bolan instead. Cici of course falls head over heels for Bolan and goes tearing off with him on his quest.

    The plot gets further complicated when an old Vietnam buddy of Bolan's, now working as muscle for the Mafia, offers to give Bolan the "Judas Kiss" in Paris. But after getting there, and seeing Bolan doing such a good job of blowing away criminal scumbags to save young prostitutes, the Judas decides to help Bolan at the last minute and saves him from ambush. Bolan liquidates another pile of Mafia jokers before jumping on a motorboat with Cici and zooming away. Of course, not all ends well, and Cici gets a second belly button as a result, but hey, that's the breaks when you're rollin' with Bolan, right?

    There are a number of goofy sub-plots and twists to this book, and I was tempted to ding it a star because of them, but honestly, this book is so much fun - definitely a more "fun" title than Miami Massacre - I stayed with five stars. From Bolan constantly being distracted by the "assets" of the prostitutes to him trying to speak in a "French" accent to Cici, to the world-famous actress strolling into a "safari shop" and buying a scoped elephant gun with no one even questioning why, there's so many goofy moments in this book that it is a five-star on its screwball factor alone.
    3 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 22, 2024
    Don Pendleton has a good series with these Mack Bolan books. He’s out for justice and usually gets it completed. Kinda crazy but fun reading. Quick stories with lots of shootouts. Recommend these!
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 26, 2023
    The Executioner goes international with Continental Contract, the fifth entry in Don Pendleton's iconic action-adventure series. After dealing the Mafia a bloody nose in Miami, Mack Bolan is looking to skip town. The only way out leads him to Paris, where he quickly learns that the Mob is not solely an American problem. The Bolan Blitz is on in short order as France gets a taste of the pain that The Executioner can dole out.

    I'm enjoying reading through the original Pendleton novels (aka the Mafia Wars) and I'm looking forward to the next entry in the series.
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2024
    It didn't really stand out. Wasn't that great. Just eh. Not sure what else to stay. Read it to get through it. But that's about it.
  • Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2022
    The book kept moving and was. Never dull. He was always killing bad guys. I just wonder if could have still done it without falling in bed with one girl then another.
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 20, 2024
    Mack Bolan escapes his problems in Miami by flying to Paris and almost getting the jump on the Mafia who do not expect him to cross the ocean. On the flight, he discovers his new face has a reasonable resemblance to a Hollywood actor and when the Mafia moves in for the snatch, they grab the wrong man. Bolan wants to just go on with his life, but that’s not the sort of person he is. He hunts down the bad guys, rescues the man, and gets into a huge and interesting problem in France. There are people being punished for his actions and he needs to make it clear why nobody messes with the Executioner.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 29, 2022
    Mack Bolan continues his war against the Mafia across the "POND" to Europe. His style of seek and destroy leaves His mark on France's underworld.
  • Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2016
    Years ago I started reading the Executioner series and found it a very good read for those of who really love plenty of action.
    One person found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

  • Daniel
    5.0 out of 5 stars A good read
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 23, 2022
    A really good read ,all the ingredients for a good book,Action Violence and sex,well written I shall be looking for more Mack Bolan books.
  • Walter E. Kurtz
    5.0 out of 5 stars Mack Bolan keeps killing, but now in France.
    Reviewed in Canada on July 16, 2015
    After killing a lot of gangsters in Miami (see the previous book), Bolan ends up in Washington where he is trying to bust a Mafia operation at the Dulles airport. But in reality the operation is a clever trap and Bolan, after a gun battle, has to flee for his life. With the airport surrounded by police, he boards the first available airplane, which happens to be going to Paris.

    In the airplane, Bolan meets a famous movie actor who happens to look almost like him. This is most curious. Bolan got a new face in the third book of the series. From what I remember, this new face was based on the face of a friend of his from Vietnam. At no point anybody in the previous books mentioned that he looks like a certain famous movie star.

    So, in any case, Bolan arrives in Paris not knowing what to do with himself, when he sees the movie actor being kidnapped by the French Mafia who mistake him for Bolan. This sets the Executioner on a rescue mission and a war against French organized crime. And all the while he is busy battling French gangsters, a whole army (fifty, to be precise) of Mafiosi arrives from the United States to finish him once and for all. Along with them comes an old army buddy of Bolan who plans to betray him.

    I will not described the plot any further, to avoid spoilers. (But there will be one big spoiler later.) Overall, the plot is good and captivating and, which is rare for an Executioner book, it does not go where you expect it to go. The action scenes are top notch, but what surprised me the most is the character development. First, there is Bolan himself. He is starting to rethink his vendetta. By now he fully realizes that this is a dark path that must end with his death and tragedy. He broods quite a lot on it and even has moments of self-loathing. I like this because in most books, especially later ones, Bolan is portrayed as unfeeling.

    Then there are the other characters. In most Executioner books characters tend to be poorly developed and one dimensional. Not so in this one. We get to meet a British prostitute who is looking for the meaning of life in a Parisian bordello. A woman whose husband Bolan had killed. A tough French mafia boss who is on the inside a little man dreaming, and failing miserable, of becoming a great man. And a French actress who is at first sight too coquettish to be liked, but who quickly grows on you.

    The book has its weaknesses, of course. There are some plot holes and things that don’t add up. For one, the book’s description says that Bolan does not speak French, but he does. It is explained that back when he was in the army, when he was stationed in Germany, he would sometimes visit France.

    Okay. And he learned to speak French so well while doing it? Does that mean that he also speaks German and Vietnamese? Then again, maybe he does.

    Or, another thing. At one point Bolan goes to see an Algerian gun dealer to buy new weapons. How does he know about this dealer and how to approach him? He didn’t plan to go to France, so he didn’t have the time to research the gun dealer beforehand. Did he used to buy weapons from him back when he was a G.I. visiting Paris on leave?

    And why is American Mafia in control of France? France, like any country, has its criminal underworld, but it is mainly made up of Frenchmen. Why are Italians in charge? And if we accept that the Mafia is in charge for whatever reason, why is France run from U.S. and not from Italy itself? After all, Sicily is far closer to France than America.

    These are minor points, but they did bug me. However, the biggest letdown is the ending where Bolan ends up confronting his army buddy and the Mafia army that came with him. Normally I avoid spoilers, but here I feel that I have to break my own rule.

    So what happens? Basically, the army buddy has a sudden change of heart and decides to help Bolan at the risk of his own life. But why? Thorough the book he has been portrayed as someone who would sell his own mother if the price was right. And then suddenly he changes his mind and starts feeling all warm and fuzzy about Bolan because Bolan is killing some bad people? Bolan had been killing bad people for four books now and the guy didn’t care, so why the change of heart?

    I think that the book would have been immensely better had Bolan been forced to fight (and kill) his former friend. The book is already very dark. Bolan spends a lot of time questioning himself. To see that an old friend of his became seduced by the money offered for Bolan’s head and decided to betray his former brother in arms would only add to the overall darkness and make Bolan question himself even more.

    The final gun battle with the fifty Mafiosi is also something of a letdown. It is unresolved. In the next book Bolan is supposed to go to England. I hope that the story will pick up from there.

    Overall, this is one of the better Executioner book. Not because of the action scenes, which are good but not all that original, but because of all those interesting characters and because of the turmoil that goes on in Mack Bolan’s soul. I give it five stars.
  • Chris Hulme
    4.0 out of 5 stars Easy reading mens adventure
    Reviewed in Canada on September 1, 2019
    I have been reading the series for 20 years. The more recent ones are ghost written and don't have the same storylines and plots that the original writer did. I found these on Amazon, taking me back to how it all started. These are well-written easy to read books. Great action edventure, easy reading.
  • Avid Reader
    5.0 out of 5 stars Long ago friend
    Reviewed in Canada on January 10, 2022
    Read Don Pendleton many years ago, and when this book popped up I had to revisit. Mack Bolan hits France to continue his war against the Mafia. He meets several ladies who want to save him from himself but his hatred of the Mafia won’t let him be tamed. France will never be the same! ENJOY.

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