Rogue Justice is framed by an intro and epilogue by a colleague of the hero and briefly summarizes his attempt to assassinate Hitler and the ensuing retaliation assassination attempt by the Nazis (the story of Rogue Male). After this, the hero (he has so many names and aliases that one forgots who he even is) returns using the Nicaraguan passport of his would-be assassin and tries again to take Hitler down. He ends up in jail, which is luckily bombed, killing his captors and starting the adventure in this book.
The rest of the book is him making his way all over Europe in an attempt to escape the occupied territory and to join the British forces to take the fight to the Nazis in a more conventional manner. His love was tortured and murdered by the Nazis and he lives for revenge only. He won't even get with the hot Greek resistance agent because he can only think of his dead wife. The route he takes is so cool and each stop is a little segment of adventure. Household is really in command of his material. He seems to know the geography, culture and military situation of each country and even region of a country they go through. The journey goes from Northern Germany, through Poland, across mountains to Romania, then on to Istanbul via the Black Sea then western Greece, then Italy and finally back to Jerusalem. There is a lot of British self-satisfaction and veneration of the Jewish people. Household always has to elicit one Yuck or Yikes! per book (I had said it in two different reviews) and his extreme colonialist portrayal of Israel is the them that does so here. Yikes!
On the plus side of the ledger, he kills 18 Nazis in all kinds of ways, often after witnessing their barbarism, so particularly satisfying. I'm surprised that he was writing this will so late in the game. I'm going to look for more of his later work.



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