BLAST FROM THE PAST
[4.5 stars rounded down to 4]
"Send forth the boys".- Prime Minister Golda Meir authorizing activation of the Wrath Of God Project.
Nukes. No military/counter-terrorist thriller series is complete without at least one book focusing on crazed fanatics getting their grubby mitts on the good stuff. The nature of the threat makes it perfect to build fast paced, race against time scenarios and allows authors to demonstrate what their characters are made of. However, since so many books have used this threat time and time again, authors have to be creative to prevent readers from getting bored. Brad Taylor is one such creative author, having quickly established himself as one of the hottest names in the military/counter-terrorist thriller genre with his ongoing Pike Logan/Jennifer Cahill series. While the nature of the threat in this book has forced me to take one star off (can't match the GPS constellation failing like in book 5), his version of the terrorist/nuclear weapon scenario is one of the best in years, topping Memorial Day by Vince Flynn which was one of the first thrillers to focus on the nuclear threat in a post-9/11 world. Now to the review. What happens when history begins to repeat itself in the worst way possible?
The novel begins in September 5th, 1972 in the closing stages of one the defining terrorist attacks in history. The Munich Olympic Incident. We get to see from the perspective of one of the hostages the moment when a hand grenade got tossed into the helicopter, incinerating everyone inside. We then cut to five years later where the man officially behind the attack is having a chat with a KGB officer. The latter cultivated him as an asset and to increase his standing in the PLO, gave him the intel which made Munich successful. As their meeting concludes, the KGB officer witnesses the demise of his asset, Ali Salameh, with Mossad blowing him off the face of Beirut with a car bomb. Cut to 2014 Bulgaria where an FSB officer creatively murders a informant meeting with a Mossad officer with a tricked out bluetooth transmitter. He then returns to his safe house and finds the FSB director general waiting for him. The latter tasks his subordinate with a new mission. To kill the people watching a Nigerian Boko Haram terrorist which the FSB is considering cultivating for a special purpose. The officer does the job but unfortunately, his victims are members of the Taskforce, the deniable counter-terrorist unit the main protagonists of the series are members of. They fly into Bulgaria and survive an attempted killing. From there, they get sucked into a conspiracy which threatens the most anticipated sporting event of the year in a rarely used setting.
In terms of plot, "Days Of Rage" maintains the extremely high standards of the previous books. Pike and Jennifer slowly find their work cut out for them as the main opposition for much of the book are not a bunch of amateur Islamist fanatics. This opposition establishes themselves causing the stark death of one of my favorite secondary characters. The action is equal to that of the previous book, "The Polaris Protocol". From a violent cat and mouse game across a Bulgarian historical fort to a frantic hunt for the nuclear weapon across one of the busiest cities in South America, "Days Of Rage" has the action that has come to be expected from the Pike Logan series.
The novel also has the research Brad Taylor has become known for. I even learned a thing or two, (The FSB despite officially concerned solely with domestic security does have a mandate to go overseas like their counterparts at the SVR). Part of that research also extends to the innovative kit with a fictional twist that features in the books. This time, it's the Russian Federation which steals the show. The antagonists in this book have possession of a nifty transmitter which can sabotage medical equipment and even take control of modern cars. Recently, a experiment done by DARPA proved that automobiles with computerized components could be hacked like any computer and be commanded to do things like speed up, while the driver would be powerless to stop such a thing.
Now to characters. Pike and Jennifer have fully developed and are always a joy to read. Jennifer in particular has only gotten more savvy with each book. At one point in the novel where things go balls up and there's a armed FSB officer at point blank range, she doesn't hesitate and instead unloads on him with her Glock 30. Next, we have a team from Mossad who help Pike and Jennifer along when the oversight council have one of their moments. They reflect the relationship between Pike and Jennifer but instead, inverts them. First there's Shoshana. She's the trigger-woman and the equivalent of Pike. Very quirky, but insanely competent at her job, I hope she makes a reappearance in another book. Next, we have Aaron. He's the straight-man who tries to reign in his partner's wilder tendencies, like Jennifer does with Pike. The relationship between them is some of the best character interaction Brad Taylor has written and is further enlivened when Shoshanna instigates a debate between her and Pike about their different perspectives on killing.
Now to the antagonists. Sadly on this front, I think Taylor didn't do as well in this book compared to the last one. There was only one clear standout, Yuri Gorshenko the FSB officer. Quite the fanatical nationalist who wants his country on top once more, the author appears to use him as an illustration about how getting consumed by one's feelings can lead to damnation in a high stakes profession where death is one bullet away. As he suffers set-back and failure, his mental state slowly comes crashing down and he's reduced to a vengeful, pathetic wreck in his final attempt at killing the main characters.
Overall, while not pushing the Pike Logan series into new heights, "Days Of Rage" maintains the standards set by the previous books and is perhaps the best Post-9/11 counter-terrorist thriller revolving around the nuclear bomb threat. Taylor enriches the narrative with a historical conspiracy reaching back to the earliest days of international terrorism and with a great secondary antagonist and two secondary protagonists who liven up the proceedings with Pike and Jennifer and further establishes Brad Taylor as the new Vince Flynn.