This book hit home for me as I have been involved since 2009 in the investigation and irradiation of cartel DTOs in the National Forests of Colorado. This book highlights the dangers of drug trafficking on public lands and accurately describes the difficulties law enforcement face trying to bring these crews down. Great read!
I first heard of John Nores from watching a Joe Rogan podcast (#1340) that he was featured on. It was a great podcast and I recommend it to anyone interested on the topic. John Nores seems like a great guy and I'm thankful for his service and commend him for his contribution to protecting a national treasure that is our public parks and lands. The topic and stories behind this book are very interesting and they especially come to life on Rogan's podcast.
From a literary perspective, the writing seems to be at a bit of an elementary level. It can be a bit dry at times and often reads like a lab report. Some of the language, phrasing, and storytelling can get a bit repetitive. I enjoyed the Afterward by James Swan, which included statistics and history about game wardens - a nod to the important and dangerous work that they do across the country.
From a formatting perspective, I found the Kindle edition to be lacking. Chapters were not delineated, making it difficult to navigate to a specific location in the book. The justified text was awkward, often leaving large gaps between words and unnecessarily forcing quotations and headings to additional lines.
Overall I really enjoy John Nores' contributions, but think that the book would have benefited from additional editing and formatting.
The first three chapters were thrilling, but it started to get very repetitive, predictable, and dull towards the end. Appreciate everyone for what they do though!