2.5 stars
This books follows the adventures of a group of teen spies working for the British Intelligence, as they try to bring down a ruthless religious cult from within.
This book flickers between two and three stars. So to decide which one I want to settle on, I'm going to take a leaf out of Miss Rory Gilmore's book, and make a pro con list.
Pros
-The tension was great and the story line was fairly fast paced. Robert Muchmore did manage to drag my to the edge of my seat on several occasions.
-Also, the book had a morbid curiosity about it. The main story was based around a cult, so I couldn't help thinking to myself 'omg how bad is this going to get?'.
Cons
-The writing was very standard, the lack of originality left the book a bit flat.
-I found the main character quite annnoying, he seemed to spend most of his time complaining. Going on about how if he wasn't on a super secret mission, he would be getting off with loads of hot girls.
-My main problem with this book, is that the front cover told me that I would 'wish it was true'. Well...I didn't. I have my list of imaginary academies that I'd love to attend (eg Hogwarts, Camp Half-Blood) and the CHEREB facility just dosen't cut it. It all sounded a bit miserable to me.
So...
This wasn't my kind of book and the writing wasn't amazing, but it works okay as a 'boys book'. It does say it's 'unsuitable for younger readers', which is fair enough because there are some quite graphic decriptions. I'd probably recommend it for those who want to up grade from something like the Alex Rider series; it has the same level of complexity, but it's a little more teen than tween.