https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/michael-byrnes/bounty/


KIRKUS REVIEW
Vigilantism goes viral in this thriller about a website that pays bounties for 
the killing of unpunished child abusers, financial scammers, human rights 
violators, and other bad actors.
These are individuals such as Chase Lombardi, a Bernie Madoff–like investment 
banker, who days after his acquittal gets shot through the eye by a sniper in 
the name of "social justice" while gazing out the window of his posh Manhattan 
office. The price on his head, as he was informed in taunting text and email 
alerts: $530,000. More than 20 other people have been targeted by 
bounty4justice.com in the United States, Europe, and Asia. But even the 
savviest techs can't locate the host servers of the site, especially after it 
starts dealing in untraceable NcryptoCash. As brutal as the killings are—a 
bigoted white congressman is torched in his car by his Hispanic limo driver for 
cancelling insurance benefits, resulting in the death of the driver's asthmatic 
son—the people behind bounty4justice are hailed as "freedom fighters" à la 
Edward Snowden. Soon enough, the "proof of death" videos required by the site 
for payment go viral, a reality show–like fever grips the nation, and ordinary 
citizens are competing with professional assassins for prize money. Byrnes (The 
Genesis Plague, 2010, etc.) has a solid, if far-fetched, premise to work with, 
and he knows his way around secure message boards and such. But he spends so 
much time cataloging the assorted targets and the workings of the site that he 
risks wearing the reader out. And the book never delivers the kind of dramatic 
payoff its "cyber spring" promises.
Charles Bronson's Death Watch meets the Internet, with little of the 
hand-wringing melodrama that might suggest.
Pub Date: July 26th, 2016
ISBN: 978-0-8041-7834-1
Page count: 432pp
Publisher: Ballantine
Review Posted Online: May 4th, 2016
Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15th, 2016

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