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Russian Roulette (Alex Rider)

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Torture Always Works: Torture isn't even used much in the novel, and is usually avoided or interrupted. The series as a whole becomes this; initially at least, Alex is generally threatened and held captive by villains but they never actually follow on any of their nasty fates because he escapes first. By the time of the final book, he actually gets waterboarded, by the CIA no less. Fans of the Alex Rider series are eager for the arrival of this book, Yassen Gregorovich becoming and remaining one of the most popular characters in the series since his first appearance in Stormbreaker. Downer Ending: Scorpia ends with Alex getting shot by a sniper with no indication that he survives. You only know he does because there are four more books.

Eagle Strike: Yassen Gregorovich (again, though Cray shoots him for refusing to kill Alex & Sabina)Nightshade has been advertised as being tougher and more adult than the rest of the series, with the intention being that as well as appealing to the series' target market, it will also be enjoyed by readers who read the first books when they originally came out 20 years ago. Alas, Poor Villain: This is implied when General Sarov is Driven to Suicide in Skeleton Key; it is more overt in the graph

However, later books in the series deliberately try and change certain parts of the formula, or move them around; for example, Eagle Strike is based around Alex going rogue after MI6 refuse to believe him when he comes to them rather than vice-versa, the seeming Big Bad of Ark Angel turns out to be a decoy created by the true villain of the piece. There are also two supplementary materials, Alex Rider: The Gadgets (featuring blueprints of the gadgets Alex uses), and Alex Rider: Mission Files, featuring assorted in-universe correspondence, diagrams, blueprints and miscellany from the first seven books; and a World Book Day book to mark the 20th anniversary, Undercover: The Classified Files, released in 2020. The books are also being adapted as a series of graphic novels (that reached Ark Angel in 2020) that form a different canon to the books.Just in Time: Occurs at least once in every novel, most notable in Crocodile Tears when Rahim saves Alex from peril three times. Disproportionate Retribution: In the first book, Herod Sayle planned to kill millions of innocent schoolchildren as revenge for the Prime Minister bullying him at school. Then we have Damian Cray in the fourth book, who arranged the death of a journalist who objected to the violence in his video games, and later told Alex he planned to kill him before he found out he was a spy, on the basis that Alex had done too well at what was supposed to be an extremely difficult game. And then in Scorpia Rising we have Razim, who, as a child, stabbed his nanny in the leg when she told him off for teasing his sister. Yeah, Anthony Horowitz is fond of this trope. Stuff Blowing Up: Several of Alex's gadgets; Smithers notes when giving him the exploding pens in Crocodile Tears that he "likes his explosions".

Originally, "Yassen" was to follow Snakehead as the eighth book in the series, and would be the final Alex Rider novel, though Horowitz rethought this idea following negative responses during school visits. Alex notes that when Alan Blunt gets angry over his accusations against Damian Cray in Eagle Strike, it is the first time he has ever shown any emotion at all (and it occurs to him that not many people disagree with Blunt to his face). Later, in Scorpia, Blunt is visibly afraid about what will happen if Scorpia's plan succeeds, and it is this that finally coerces Alex to agree to help him again; he compliments Alex for the first time after the COBRA meeting; and when he tells Alex the truth about how his parents died at the end of the book there is audible pain in his voice, and he attempts to comfort Alex for the only time in the series. In Snakehead, when Alex confronts him over how his treatment of Ash lead him to defect to Scorpia, he has the good grace to look embarrassed. There have been eleven books in the main series, plus a prequel and a collection of short stories which are both included in the series' numbering: Yassen finds out that John Rider worked for MI6, as he found a special Power Plus radio transmitter in his bag. Yassen comes to the decision to kill Sharkovsky, and he travelled to the ' dacha'. He confronts the man in his study alone, and discovers he is now in a wheelchair and a very weaken state. Yassen reveals his heritage from Estrov and blames Sharkovsky for the death of his family and friends and the life that he lead, to which Sharkovsky shows no remorse. He then plays a reversed game of Russian Roulette (5 bullets and one empty chamber) on himself infront of Sharkovsky as a last chance to avoid his future life as a killer. Miraculously, Yassen survives and believes that fate has chosen this life for him. He then proceeds to vengefully kills Sharkovsky by shooting him between the eyes. He then kills Ivan (who walked immediately in the study room after he heard the shot) by shooting him once in the head and twice in the heart. Emotionlessly praising his revenge, and that he had killed for the first and second times in his life, he leaves Silver Forest.Russian Roulette note Russian Roulette is a Prequel focusing on the character of Yassen Gregorovich. Subsequent reprints have identified it as the tenth book in the series and have the Alex Rider logo. (2013) And then there was the time Alex spilled his guts to a few CIA agents in Scorpia Rising to prevent this. They torture him anyway. He is only saved when their superior Joe Bryne (who knows Alex) intervenes. Fiona's friends, who "don't bother with rules in the countryside", own hunting shotguns and smoke cigarettes despite being minors in Britain. One of them also mentions the nearest police station is 40 miles away from where they live. Series Continuity Error: Perhaps as a result of being the first entry in the series after a long hiatus, Never Say Die contains several of these: the characters of Wolf and Fox are conflated, and their previous meeting is referred to as when Alex took on "the gang known as Snakehead", when — as the original book made clear — a snakehead is a type of gang. The Sequel Hook at the end also mentions that MI6's captive is currently being held hostage at the secret facility on Gibraltar from Scorpia Rising, even though at the end of that book Mrs Jones decided to shut the facility down, although the short timeframe of the series means it is possible it just hasn't been closed down yet. (The first of these was corrected when the book was reprinted.) Similarly, Point Blanc ends with Alex and his pseudo-clone Julius fighting on the rooftop of Alex's school. The last few paragraphs only refer to them abstractly, as "one Alex Rider" and "the other Alex Rider," and with one being pushed off the roof to their death. It isn't clear which was which until you notice that the other books, well, exist. Julius survived anyway, as per Scorpia.

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