Flight of the Fox

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Pub Date 23 Jul 2018 | Archive Date 30 Jul 2018

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Description

An innocent math professor runs for his life as teams of hitmen try to prevent publication of their government’s dark history.

College professor Sam Teagarden stumbles upon a decades-old government cover-up when an encoded document mysteriously lands in his in-box, followed by a cluster of mini-drones programmed to kill him.

That begins a terrifying flight from upstate New York, to Washington, to Key West as Teagarden must outfox teams of hitmen equipped with highly sophisticated technology. While a fugitive, he races to decode the journal, only to realize the dreadful truth—it’s the reason he’s being hunted because it details criminal secrets committed by the U.S. in the 20th Century.

If he survives and publishes the decoded diary, he’ll be a heroic whistle blower. But there is no guarantee. He may also end up dead.

An innocent math professor runs for his life as teams of hitmen try to prevent publication of their government’s dark history.

College professor Sam Teagarden stumbles upon a decades-old government...


Advance Praise

Flight of the Fox is an explosively paranoid thriller that pays homage to classics of the genre. Basnight delivers nonstop action and an everyman hero to root for.” —Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author

“Basnight’s novel does double duty. It’s both a fast-paced and furious thriller and a thought provoking commentary on a government gone wild. Read it.” —Reed Farrel Coleman, New York Times bestselling author of What You Break

“Gray Basnight has written a clever, inventive, gripping, suspenseful tale that’ll have you up nights until you reach the final page. Skillfully weaving fact with fiction, Flight of the Fox taps into our worst nightmares about the potential excesses of power.” —Charles Salzberg, author of the award-nominated Henry Swann mysteries and Second Story Man

Flight of the Fox is a quick-paced story that puts you in the passenger seat of a thrilling adventure featuring, cyber and techno villains, and a fight for justice. Great action thriller!”  —Jerri Williams, retired FBI agent and author of Pay To Play 

Flight of the Fox is an explosively paranoid thriller that pays homage to classics of the genre. Basnight delivers nonstop action and an everyman hero to root for.” —Joseph Finder, New York Times...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9781946502612
PRICE US$18.95 (USD)

Average rating from 4 members


Featured Reviews

An exciting, fast-paced thriller that brings the past of the FBI into the present with the location of a 'rumored' diary. A friend of a 49 year old mathematician knows that he worked for the CIA figuring out coded information in the past, so when his son, working at a Federal library, finds a diary that is encrypted his son sends it to the math teacher.
There are so many rumors about the start of secret government teams in the past, but what if one story is true?! Do you let the public read the info, or would it cause too much strife, as people would not understand much of what has to be done to keep this country safe?
This story really makes you think, what if this scenario happened today! Soon the regular math teacher is on the run from folks he does not know, then after some harrowing adventures, the cops are after him too!! Can a middle aged man keep ahead of the specialists sent to keep him quiet?
There is non-stop action in this tale, wonderful characters and sensational scenes that delve right into our worst nightmares!!
I received this ARC from Down&Out Books, Netgalley and author Gray Basnight, all of whom I thank for taking me on an intriguing adventure, and I leave my thoughts in this review so perhaps you, too, will travel this tale...

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One of the better conspiracy novels to come out in the near term. Not just involving plans to deceive and harm a small segment of people but it involves evil at a national level in the United States. Sam Teagarden is a professor of Mathematics that is going through the recent death of his wife in an automobile accident. By chance he literally stumbles upon a decades old government cover up via an encoded document mysteriously appearing in his in box. Before he has time to think he is attacked by drones trying to kill him. This begins Sam's flight from several assassins beginning in upstate New York and ending in the Florida keys all the while with the recent death of his wife to haunt him.
While he is running to avoid the killers after him Sam begins the work of decoding the document. He finds that it is the evidence of a government cover up and the explanation of why his death is sought by agents of the U.S. government. The release of the document to the public can literally cause the fall of the entire government since it is evidence of crimes committed by high level officials years ago against many people including both a president and a possible future president.
The writing is crisp and carries the reader through the discovery of a crime so evil that there are no words to describe it. An added inducement for those reading the book is that the crime is presented by the author as really occurring. It is , of course, Mr Basnight's opinion as presented in a work of fiction but one that might even have the truth buried in it. There will be no sleep for anyone beginning to read this novel until it ends during Sam's activities in Key West, Florida.

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This thriller opens with four armed drones attacking college math professor Sam Teagarden at his home and killing his dog before Sam manages to escape. In hiding, Sam opens an email from Stuart, a colleague’s son, who is the archives librarian for the FBI. The attachment is 34 pages of handwritten entries from an old spiral notebook with the message that this document has never been decoded and the “bureau lost interest decades ago.”

A riveting race between Sam’s deciphering abilities and the team of killers chasing him provide the framework for this story. As pieces of the document are translated the urgency of sharing the information with the proper authorities begins to mount. The problem is the dead bodies piling up are attributed to Sam and not the killers who are getting rid of anyone in their way.

A compelling read that keeps the reader turning pages, the author has an impressive imagination. In fact, Gary Basnight applies his knowledge of technology to create the dramatic tactics used to track and attack Sam throughout the book. Finally, the premise for this adventure is unusual and quite unexpected. Flight of the Fox is an amazing summer read.

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Flight of the Fox opens with a “Dear John” letter that encapsulates why retired Columbia math professor Sam Teagarden is on the run for his life, hunted like a fox.

Monday, June 13, 1938
FBI Headquarters, Washington, D.C.

Dear John,

This is to advise you of a new file entered to the bureau record, fully encrypted, and maintained only by me. It’s because you are such a naughty boy. It’s because of your habit of personally vetting all the strapping new talent that walks (or may be persuaded to confidentially walk) our enlightened side of the street.

Why is the nameless writer maintaining encrypted files on John’s activities? “For honor and career, naturally. Yes, my love, this is the bitter voice of mercenary cunning. It is my insurance against termination, transfer, or being dumped as your sweetheart.” “Dear John” is John Edgar Hoover, the founder and first director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations (from 1935 until his death in 1977). Decades later, the encrypted information is still incendiary and must never come to light.

Eighty-one years later, July 20, 2019, in bucolic Bethel, New York, Sam Teagarden is relaxing on his sundeck with Coconut, his “old and overweight yellow Lab.” He hears a “revved-up buzz” from what he thinks is a new and improved hummingbird, but it’s actually a “compact helicopter about the size of a baseball.” Coconut saves Sam’s life by leaping up and taking a round from the menacing device—a round of poison that results in “instantaneous termination of life.”

Sam’s greatest strength, even in the face of inexplicable and targeted evil, is his calculating, analytical way of looking at facts. Sam thinks, “Who would do this? More importantly—why?” as he swiftly realizes he’s the target. Why? Because it’s “actually possible.”

Occam’s razor, the very definition of logical frugality, says the hypothesis with the fewest assumptions is the correct hypothesis. Put another way, the simplest solution—is—the solution.

If he’s the target, then staying put makes him a sitting duck. But what about those poisonous mini-bombs? Is it a cliché to expect that the hero of a thriller will be a man of action when it’s so often the case? Guns blazing come to mind. When Sam was an undergrad at Chapel Hill, he shot skeet, although “he failed to qualify for the U.S. team at the ’92 Olympic Games in Barcelona.” Clearly, no ordinary skeet shooter. Sam locates his 1985 Remington 1100 shotgun in his crowded basement workshop but cannot seem to locate the bullets. Time for Sam Teagarden to utilize a Zen approach to problem-solving. The question: “Where would an obsessively cautious man like me hide shotgun shells?”

The only way to find a solution was to be calm, turn inward and let the subconscious whisper the answer. That was the way all great solutions are born. It happens when people are in the shower, waking-up, falling asleep, mowing the grass, jogging. Only when the mind is empty of all competing nonsense, will the voice of atavistic clairvoyance speak loud enough to be heard by the conscious mind.

Sam remembers that the shells are outside in the garden shed, so “as wary as a turtle hiding from sniffing coyotes, he poked his head past the lawnmower for a better look.” Unfortunately, he spots four drones circling his house. Sam creates a diversion, locates the shells, load up his shotgun, and takes out the drones. Then, he’s off, plunging into the woods that surround his house.

On the day his home was attacked and his dog was killed, “an encoded document mysteriously lands in his in-box.” Before Sam entered academe, he worked as a low-level government cryptologist—translation, he’s a trained codebreaker. Gray Basnight mixes mathematical and animal metaphors with pinpoint precision, giving readers insight into how a 49-year-old retired mathematics professor can elude waves of FBI assassins. When Sam realizes he has spent his first night as a fugitive running in circles, he’s elated because circles are “the stuff of legendary mystery.”

The great mathematician Archimedes died while trying to understand them. When the Romans came to kill him, he pointed to his chalk etchings and told them, “Do not disturb my circles.” A soldier accommodated the demand by running him through the gut with a sword.

Sam Teagarden does not intend to oblige his pursuers by standing still while they kill him: he’s going to run like a fox. How does a fox run? Sam knows that too.

Teagarden couldn’t remember why he knew about fox hunting. A smart fox will run a zig-zag pattern to throw off the dogs. A dumb fox will simply bolt hard in a straight line. Dogs prefer a dumb fox because it makes them look better when they quickly catch the prey. Hunters prefer a smart fox because it’s more fun.

Sam hopes to “be a smart fox running from dumb hunters,” but the FBI hunters are not dumb. Sam Teagarden cleverly negotiates a maze of traps while calling upon reserves of guile, all the while decoding a phenomenally explosive document. For Sam to be the greatest whistleblower of all time and not get dead first, it sure helps to be a mathematician/cryptologist with the skills of a crafty fox—he has the rogue G-Men running in circles as they try in vain to take him down.

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