Series: Book 5 in the Mitch Rapp series
Rating: ****
Tags: Thrillers, General, Political, Fiction, Lang:en
Summary
Fighting terrorism on foreign ground, CIA
superagent Mitch Rapp does whatever it takes to protect
American freedom.
MEMORIAL DAY CIA intelligence has pointed to a major terrorist attack
on the United States, just as the nation's capital prepares
for a grand Memorial Day tribute to the veterans of World War
II. Racing to Afghanistan, Mitch Rapp leads a commando raid
on an al Queda stronghold in a remote border village -- and
defuses plans for a nuclear strike on Washington. The crisis
averted, the special ops work is done. But Rapp knows, in the
face of a new kind of enemy, nothing is as it seems -- and
it's up to him alone to avert a disaster of unimaginable
proportions. The latest entry in Flynn's popular Mitch Rapp series
(after 2003's
Executive Power) offers a gripping look at what
could transpire if a terrorist group were to sneak a nuclear
weapon into the U.S. Rapp, the relentless, marble-hearted CIA
assassin and terrorist hunter, would never let that happen,
of course, and Flynn's description of the process of bringing
a nuke ashore and the lengths to which the government's
counterterrorism force will go to prevent harm to U.S.
citizens add up to another page-flipping extravaganza. Rapp,
back in the field after a long stint on desk duty for
insubordination, unearths the bomb plot during a daring
commando raid on an al-Qaeda stronghold in Afghanistan. A
U.S. strike force manages to intercept and disarm the nuke
moments after it arrives by freighter in Charleston, S.C.
Everyone, including series stalwart President Robert Hayes,
congratulates themselves on a job well done, but Rapp isn't
convinced; he believes al-Qaeda leader Mustafa al-Yamani has
smuggled a second nuke into the country and plans to detonate
it in Washington, D.C., during Memorial Day celebrations.
Rapp, a ruthless terrorist pursuer by temperament and
training, turns it up several notches this time around,
following al-Yamani's scent with feverish abandon. Flynn
trots out his usual assortment of characters to keep the
action tense—wishy-washy cabinet members, political
climbers, invective-spewing terrorists and a selected
assortment of ice queens who use sex as a weapon. Yet his
skillful use of converging plots, particularly the panic
created by having a nuke on the loose, is enough to keep
Flynn's growing fan base more than willing to overlook the
formulaic components.
"The king of high-concept political intrigue." -- Dan
Brown
"You'll be hooked....Move over, Jack Ryan!" --
Portland Oregonian
From Publishers Weekly
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