Mr. Robinson's latest effort left me disappointed. Did the story grab me and not let go? Did it fully engage me? Did it have that "page turner" pacing and feel to it? Sadly for me, the answers were no, no, and no. It was just...boring.
The plot was thin, the speed of building a new base in Ireland was just surreal, and the idea that Ireland would become the 51st state if we just forgive half their debt is bizarre. I loved many of Mr. Robinson's earlier books with curmudgeonly Admiral Morgan running the show. I just believe the author has lost some of his energy and originality.
The plot wasn't anything really creative or new, not if you've read, like every Dale Brown thriller there is.
Mack Bedford doesn't even appear until more than a quarter of the book is gone (at one point, I actually wondered if I was reading a Mack Bedford novel) and the "action" didn't start until past the 90% point in the book. This is a book about the NAVY SEALS. How can it possibly be boring??
The dialogue was painful. Like this stilted, clumsy passage on page 82:
"That's not going to happen. Because that would bring us as close to World War III as October 1962, when, when Khrushchev decided to plant ballistic missiles in Cuba...DEFCON 3...ninety miles from Miami and all that."
And people yell on almost every page, always in annoying italicized capital letters.
There's also tons of rah-rah "me tough" banter that makes these SEALS sound like hicks or hillbillies, like these gruesome examples:
"To face a hard-trained Navy SEAL is to face a crouched mountain lion with an M4 rifle and a combat knife."
" 'Can we stop 'em, Captain? '
'Affirmative, sir. We'll stop 'em alright. And there won't be anyone left to discuss it, either. Russian sonsabitches.'
Arnold Morgan loved Navy SEALs. "
While I realize that this is fiction and recognize the need for dramatic license, there are several plot points that are simply totally implausible, including the pivotal point at the climax of the story. When a book of this genre is really great, I find myself saying, "Wow! This could really happen!" Unfortunately, several times during this read I found myself saying, "No way! This simply wouldn't happen like this!"