Jericho Quinn #5 picks up right after #4 – and I think it one of the better books in the series. After the President and Vice President are assassinated, the Speaker of the House – actually foreign mole, Pakistani by birth and a terrorist – assumes the Presidency and sets upon the county’s destruction. Only Quinn and his compatriots know he is a fraud and enemy of the State. But what can be done? (Obviously, I recommend reading #4 before embarking on #5.)
‘Bad guys’ are still are Quinn’s family. As he is hunted (by everyone) and hides in Alaska recovering from his injuries, the US becomes a police state. The Director of the CIA is arrested. The government is in control just like the Stasi in East Germany. Yet, the uninformed populace is oblivious to it all. Is it possible for Quinn to enact a coup d'état?! As is usual for Cameron, there are a couple of plot lines moving along together and during an escape attempt by Quinn, terrorists with a bomb on an airliner become the focal point of the novel. It’s a very clever scenario.
While the story is ‘complete’, this is definitely a ‘middle book’. There is certainly more to come. (There has to be!) In fact, #s 4, 5 and (I assumed – and hope) 6 could have been one long book. (But where’s the publisher’s money in that?) … Also, I have to admit that I was a little disappointed in the very last few pages of the book. STILL, I immediacy bought #6.