The Disciple of Las Vegas: An Ava Lee Novel (An Ava Lee Novel, 2)
The Disciple of Las Vegas: An Ava Lee Novel (An Ava Lee Novel, 2) book cover

The Disciple of Las Vegas: An Ava Lee Novel (An Ava Lee Novel, 2)

Paperback – January 29, 2013

Price
$13.03
Format
Paperback
Pages
340
Publisher
Picador
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1250031938
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.81 x 8.5 inches
Weight
10.7 ounces

Description

From Booklist Ava Lee does whatever is necessary, even severing a recalcitrant wrongdoer’s thumb, to recover massive debts for her clients. The petite lesbian Chinese Canadian forensic accountant uses her sharp wits, her martial-arts training, and the connections provided by her mentor and partner—a Chinese man in his 70s known to her as “Uncle”—to operate internationally below the radar of the law. When Tommy Ordonez, the richest man in the Philippines, finds $50 million missing from the Canadian arm of his business, Ava soon discovers that the money was lost by the billionaire’s gambling-addicted brother in online poker games that were rigged by manipulating software. Proving this claim while trying to protect innocent middlemen takes Ava from her home in Toronto to Hong Kong, Manila, San Francisco, Vancouver, Victoria, Las Vegas, and London—all the while watching her back, thanks to a contract taken out on her by an adversary. From Canadian author Hamilton, this is slick, fast-moving escapism reminiscent of Ian Fleming, with more to come in what shapes up as a high-energy, high-concept series. --Michele Leber “Hamilton makes each page crackle with the kind of energy that could easily jump to the movie screen....This riveting read will keep you up late at night. It may also make you look twice from now on at any woman wearing pointy shoes.” ― Rachel Kramer Bussel, Penthouse “Formidable...Ava Lee is unbeatable at just about everything....She's perfect.” ― Toronto Star “Ian Hamilton makes the global search for hidden money as thrilling as James Bond fleeing down a snowy slope on one ski. Ava Lee is tough, fearless, quirky, and resourceful, and she has more---well, you know---than half a dozen male detectives I can think of. Ian Hamilton knows his stuff, and he has created a true original in Ava Lee.” ― Linwood Barclay, author of No Time for Goodbye “A fascinating story of a hunt for stolen millions. And the hunter, Ava Lee, is a compelling heroine: tough, smart, and resourceful.” ― Meg Gardiner, author of The Nightmare Thief “Ian Hamilton really knows his stuff, offering intriguing insights into a secret world and a heroine as fascinating as she is fierce. A fantastic read, I can't wait for the next one.” ― Simon Lewis, author of Bad Traffic “Hamilton has created a marvelous character in Ava Lee.” ― The Globe and Mail (Toronto) “Readers will discern in Ava undertones of Lisbeth Salander....Irresistible.” ― The London Free Press “Slick, fast-moving escapism reminiscent of Ian Fleming.” ― Booklist “High-end travel, cuisine, and product placement add glitz, while Ava's circle of mostly offstage friends and family lend enough personal depth to lift this thriller above solely action-oriented fare.” ― Publishers Weekly Ian Hamilton has had a range of careers over the span of his life, from journalist to diplomat, but it wasn’t until a health scare that he sat down to write his first novel. Ava Lee was the heroine that came to him and so the series was born. Hamilton’s journalismxa0has been featured in Maclean’s and Saturday Night Magazine. He is the author of The Disciple of Las Vegas , The Wild Beasts of Wuhan , The Red Pole of Macau , and The Water Rat of Wanchai . He lives in Burlington, Ontario, with his wife, Lorraine. He has four children and seven grandchildren. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. The Disciple of Las Vegas By Ian Hamilton Picador Copyright © 2013 Ian HamiltonAll right reserved. ISBN: 9781250031938 (1) When Ava Lee woke up, the first thing she felt was a sharp pain shooting through her neck and shoulder. She stretched, causing the pain to become more intense, and then slowly relaxed her muscles. She knew from experience that the lashing she had endured wasn’t going to cause any long-term damage.She turned her head to look at the bedside clock. It was only 6 a.m. She had flown home to Toronto around midnight and had been in bed for less than five hours. She had thought that two melatonin capsules and a glass of Pinot Grigio would see her through the night, but the pain and a mind that was still a jumble of emotions were gnawing at her.She lay quietly, hoping she could drift off again. After ten minutes she gave up and pulled herself out of bed. She kneeled to say a short prayer of thanks to St. Jude for her safe return, and then headed for the bathroom. Pulling off her black Giordano T-shirt, Ava turned so she could see her back in the mirror. The belt had hit her on the side of the neck and across her right shoulder, and then again on the same shoulder and partway down her back. The marks were a deep black and blue, yellowed at the edges. They looked worse than they felt, and in a few days they would start to fade. Ava went into the kitchen, made herself a Starbucks VIA Ready Brew, and sat down at the small round table set against the window overlooking Cumberland Street and Avenue Road. She lived in the heart of Yorkville, the ritziest neighbourhood in downtown Toronto. Despite the early hour, the traffic below was barely moving as the January weather tried to decide if it was raining or snowing. Normally she would have the Globe and Mail spread across the table, but she had been away for more than a weekxa0— travelling to Hong Kong, Thailand, Guyana, and the British Virgin Islands, tracking down and retrieving more than five million dollars that had been stolen from a clientxa0— and had cancelled the paper until further notice. So she opened up her laptop and turned it on to read the news online. That was a mistake.After she signed on, Ava opened her email program, expecting to see messages from friends, a bit of spam, and not much else. She froze when she saw Uncle’s name in her inbox. Uncle was her Hong Kong–based partner, a man in his seventies whose idea of high-tech communication was a Chinese knockoff iPhone he had bought for less than forty dollars at the Kowloon nighttime street market and used strictly for making calls. He had sent her two messages in the past eight hours; she couldn’t remember receiving that many from him in the past year. She opened them. They were identical, simply stating that he needed her to call him. He didn’t say it was urgent. He didn’t have toxa0— that he had sent two emails conveyed that fact well enough.Ava groaned, went over to her hot-water Thermos, and made another coffee. She knew what he wanted to talk about. While she was in Guyana they had been offered a job by a Filipino-Chinese businessman named Tommy Ordonez. Ordonez was the wealthiest man in the islands. They had put him off so they could finish the job they were on. Ava had hoped he could be put off longer, because that job had turned nasty, with unforeseen complications. What was supposed to have been a straightforward tracking and retrieval of misappropriated funds had turned into extortion. She had prevailed, but not without difficulty, as the bruises and welts demonstrated, and not without stress, some of which still lingered.Ava had turned off her cellphone the night before and thrown it into the bottom of her purse. She had intended to leave it there for a few days, or at least until she felt her head was in the right place. She went to retrieve it and saw that Uncle had called as well. She sighed. She had to call him back. She couldn’t ignore two emails and a phone message without insulting him. Insulting Uncle was something she had never donexa0— and never wished to do. It was just past six in the evening in Hong Kong, and Ava knew she’d probably catch him at a massage, an early dinner, or his Kowloon apartment.“ Wei ,” Uncle said. Ava could hear his little dog yapping and his Filipina housekeeper, Lourdes, telling it to be quiet. He was still at the apartment. “It’s Ava.”“You are in Toronto?”“Yes, I got in late last night.”“And you are okay?”“Yes, I’m fine.”“Good, I was worried about youxa0… It is early there.”“I couldn’t sleep, and then I turned on my computer and saw your emails.”“We need to talk.”Ava wondered if he thought she was being critical of his persistence, and she felt a bit uneasy about being perceived as even mildly rude. “No problem, Uncle. Is it about Tommy Ordonez?”“Yes. He and his closest adviser, Chang Wang, each called me twice yesterday, after calling me twice the day before. I have been telling them they need to be patient.”“And how did they react?”“Impatiently.”“Uncle, you did tell them we never do two jobs at the same time, and that I was still working on one?”“Of course, but it only seemed to frustrate them more. Especially Ordonez. He is a man who does not think he should ever have to stand in a queue or have someone else’s interests take precedence over his.”“Did he say that?”“He didn’t need to. Ava, the last time I spoke to him he could barely contain himself. I could feel him eating his anger, and I know that if he had been talking to anyone but me he would have exploded.”Ava finished her second coffee and, holding the phone to her ear, went to the counter and emptied another sachet into her cup. “What do we know about the job, Uncle?”“Not that much. Just that it is a lot of money, that it involves a Canadian real estate transaction, and that one of Ordonez’s younger brothers, Philip Chew, is involved. They want to meet us face to face to provide the actual details.”“Is it a firm contract?”“If we want to accept it.”“You haven’t committed?”“I thought it would be best for us to hear the full story before signing on.”“What I don’t understand, Uncle, is why, with all the resources and power they have, they need us in the first place.”She had asked that question when the job offer was first made, and it had generated an awkward response from Uncle. Now he was just vague. “They will explain everything when we are in Manila.”“So you want us to go?”“I told Chang Wang that we would discuss it with them, and they are insisting on doing that in personxa0… I am told the sum of money involved is more than fifty million dollars. I think that is worth a trip to Manila, don’t you?”“Yes, of course it is,” she said, and then realized that Uncle had twice referred to Ordonez’s right-hand man by both his family and given names. It was a form of respect he rarely used for clients, and she guessed there was some kind of bond between the two men. “This Chang, Uncle, do you know him well?”“He is from Wuhan, like me, and over the years we have done each other many favours. I would still have ten men rotting in Filipino prisons if it were not for him, and he would still be waiting for permits to build cigarette factories in Hubei province if it were not for me.”Ava was accustomed to Uncle’s Wuhan connections. He had been born and raised in a village on its outskirts, and he and the other men from there who had escaped the Communist regime had remained intensely loyal to each other. “And Chang hasn’t confided in you about the nature of Ordonez’s problem?”“His first loyalty is to Ordonez. We need to understand and respect that.”“Earlier you mentioned that Ordonez was restraining himself when he was talking to you. I didn’t think you knew him.”“Chang introduced us once, years ago, when I was at the top of my heap and he was scaling his. It was a passing encounter that seems more important to him than it is to me. I did not even remember the meeting until he mentioned it.”Ava was now standing by the kitchen window. The falling rain was beginning to freeze onto it. She watched a car skid into the intersection below and slide into an SUV. She hated this kind of weather. At least Manila would be warm. “Can you buy us an extra day or two?” she asked.Uncle hesitated. She knew he didn’t want to push her too hard. “I would like to get there as soon as possible. But if you need to spend more time in Toronto, then I will deal with Chang Wang and Ordonez as best as I can.”“Will they walk away from the deal if we delay?”“I really don’t know.”“Well, I guess that’s something we shouldn’t risk,” Ava said.“No, we should not. Their impatience could get the better of them.”She did a quick calculation. “If I catch the Cathay Pacific flight late tonight, I can be in Hong Kong the day after tomorrow, early morning, your time. That at least will give me all of today to get caught up here, and I’ll have a sixteen-hour flight I can sleep through.”“Good. We can leave for Manila the morning you arrive. I will have those flights booked. We can meet in the Wing lounge,” Uncle said. “I will let Chang Wang know right away that we are coming. Ordonez’s office is near the Ayala Centre in Makati City. The Peninsula Hotel is nearby. I will have them book us rooms.”“Okay, I’ll call you when things are confirmed on this end.”“Fine. And Ava, I think this is the right thing for us to do.”She shrugged. “Ordonez is a big man and it’s a lot of money.”“That does not mean we cannot still say no,” Uncle said. “We will go and talk to them, and then you and I can discuss what we want to do. I have to tell you, I have a feeling that it will be worth it in the end.”“Yes, Uncle.”“Now I have to call Chang,” he said.As she hung up the phone, Ava tried to remember if she’d heard Uncle mention Chang’s name before, and came up blank. That wasn’t unusual. He had a network of friends and associates that spanned Asia, though his closest contacts were those who shared those long, deep Wuhan roots. Is Ordonez from Wuhan as well? she wondered. She knew he was Chinese born, but nothing more specific than that. She’d find out soon enough, but her curiosity was far more aroused by the kind of problem a man as rich and powerful as Tommy Ordonez couldn’t handle himself.xa0Copyright © 2011 by Ian Hamilton Continues... Excerpted from The Disciple of Las Vegas by Ian Hamilton Copyright © 2013 by Ian Hamilton. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "One of my favorite new mystery series, perfect escapism."―Sarah Weinman,
  • National Post
  • The first book of an electrifying new series, Ian Hamilton's
  • The Disciple of Las Vegas
  • introduces Ava Lee: a deadly martial artist with a taste for luxury and a mind like a steel trap.
  • Fifty million dollars has disappeared into thin air from the accounts of one of the richest men in the Philippines, Tommy Ordonez. His one hope is Ava Lee―sleek, capable forensic accountant and sleuth. With the help of her Triad-connected partner, Uncle, Ava follows the money trail from San Francisco to Costa Rica to the casinos and illegal gambling dens of Las Vegas. Meanwhile, a vengeful adversary from Ava's past has put out a contract on her life, and the shadowy hit man is close at her heels every step of the way. Will Ava recover the stolen cash without stepping into the crosshairs of a growing list of enemies?

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(94)
★★★★
25%
(78)
★★★
15%
(47)
★★
7%
(22)
23%
(72)

Most Helpful Reviews

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A Novel Only H & R Block Could Love

The publishers of Ian Hamilton's The Disciple of Las Vegas: An Ava Lee Novel are attempting to position the book as Canada's answer to Steig Larssen and, get this, Ian Fleming, which says a lot about Canadian thrillers...and none of it good. Imagine Jack Webb adapting The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and that will give you a sense of how "thrilling" this book is.

Ava Lee is a Toronto forensic accountant hired to recoup $65 million pilfered by a Vancouver executive working for a beer company in Manila. Oh, and she's a lesbian and a martial arts expert, not that either one of those aspects of her personality come into play at all...unless you count a brief fight and a couple of dull email exchanages with a stranger to arrange a blind date.

It's clear that Hamilton has no idea how to construct a thriller, much less a compelling story. The first hundred pages of this book are nothing but plodding, heavy-handed exposition without a shred of actual drama or conflict, all told without the slightest bit of style, wit, or fun.

Once the exposition finally lets up, the heroine spends her time flying from place to place, interviewing people, checking her email and making phone calls to tell other characters the boring things we already know. It's all about as action-packed and fun to read as a spreadsheet.

But the crippling problem with this listless story, beyond the exposition and repetition, is that there's no real conflict for Ana to confront or dramatic obstacles for her to overcome. The emotional and physical stakes aren't just low, they are non-existent for Ava and her clients who, to make matters worse, are depicted as thoroughly unlikeable and unworthy of her efforts.

So there is zero reason for the reader to care about what happens, and no rooting interest beyond, perhaps, wanting one-dimensional Ava to get her commission on the recovered money. That's not enough to motivate readers to slog their way through this book.

And they really shouldn't bother.

Nothing remotely interesting happens until page 218, but after ten surprisingly violent pages that offer some hope that things might finally start moving, the book falls right back into its deep, narrative slumber until the very end, a long and tiresome 130 pages later.

Ava may be a martial artist but she vanquishes her adversaries and overcomes her obstacles, what few insignificant ones there are, with phone calls rather than action. The climax of the book (and I'm being very generous calling it that) comes down to her making some phone calls to ask other people to make some phone calls, and then us hearing about those phone calls in some more phone calls. As if that wasn't enough fever-pitch phone call excitement, in the final confrontation with the bad guys, Ava offers to make one more phone call.

I suppose it's only fitting then that the epilog is Ava making some more phone calls and answering her emails.

Lisbeth Salander and James Bond, eat your hearts out.
4 people found this helpful
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Unbelievbly awful

On the front cover of the book it states that this is `AN AVA LEE NOVEL', giving the impression that there have been others in a series built round this Canadian-Chinese heroine. In fact, this is only her second appearance and, whilst it might be overstating the case to say that it is likely to be her last, a successful continuation is hardly guaranteed.

There are two main problems, both of which are fundamental. The first is that not only are the characters mainly unpleasant, but, more importantly, perhaps, they are also flat and lifeless. Ordonez, the big boss whose money has been stolen, is the all too typical Asian businessman, unscrupulous and - it is implied - corrupt. His second in command, Chang, is much the same and, whilst there is an attempt to make Ava's `uncle' sympathetic, he is little more than a voice on the end of a phone. The British Member of Parliament (and of the Cabinet) is similarly unconvincing. Politicians, of course, have a fairly bad reputation these days but it is difficult to believe that this one - a liar, a bully and a flagrant racist - would ever have got anywhere near the Cabinet table. Then there is Ava herself. At the end of the novel she is said to have experienced `too many flights, too many time zones' - hardly an adequate description of somebody who seems to spend virtually all her time in the air. Furthermore, wherever and whenever she needs to travel, there always seems to be a convenient plane and, unlike ordinary mortals, she never seems to have to spend much time checking in or going through customs. When she is on the ground it is always in a hotel, taking a shower and changing into her Giordano T shirt and Adidas track pants. Her clothing and accessories are described in detail - Annick Goutal perfume, Brooks Brothers shirt, Chanel bag and, of course, the inevitable Cartier watch. We are told that she will be relentless in her pursuit of the money, something that is quite believable in view of her obvious need to dress always completely à la mode. Surprisingly, since she is only five feet three, there is no mention of fashionable heels, but this may be because they would prove a liability when she is demonstrating her own particular brand of martial arts. There is nothing about her that is remotely interesting and much - as is graphically demonstrated in her interrogation of two fraudsters - that is thoroughly unpleasant.

But if there is a weakness in characterization there is almost no plot at all. It might be expected that Ava's skill as a forensic accountant would come into play but there is no sign of it except when she does a little online banking that anybody equipped with an internet connection and the necessary passwords could manage. Her detective skills aren't required either because she can always ring up her `uncle' who, if he can't solve her problems himself, can tell her of someone who can. The author himself seems aware of how thin the plot is and tries to improve it by introducing a couple of Chinese thugs who are trying to kill her for reasons entirely unconnected with the case she is investigating. We also learn - if we needed to - that she is a lesbian, though why she should receive obviously suggestive emails from a woman she has never met is difficult to say. If the intention is to suggest an erotic side to her it is a failure.

When the novel appears to have come to an end the author surprises us by having her receive a telephone call initiating a new case. Depending upon the reader's reaction to the one just solved, this can be taken as either an invitation or a warning.
1 people found this helpful
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A Different Twist on the Good Guys (Girl)

If you like Sanford, Baldacci, Connelley, you will like Ava.
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Five Stars

A brilliant group of books
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Awesome series with great geographical locations

If you want to travel around the world with a private agent, this is it. Awesome series with great geographical locations.
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does a great job of writing about a female protagonist

I think the author, Ian Hamilton, does a great job of writing about a female protagonist. Ava Lee enjoys being with other women and does develop a relationship that continues as a story line in his books. However, Mr. Hamilton doesn't burden us with sexual references of this alternative life style.
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Five Stars

Terrific
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Disappointing - Routine, no surprises

I expected more from this book after reading the reviews and after it was recommended by a well-known author. I won't be buying anymore in the series. This was just an ordinary book with little action and no twists. I was disappointed as the potential for the character seemed good by the description. Buy Cornelia Read if you want a good protagonist.