Upon finishing this book, I went back to my Goodreads library to see what other Brad Thor books I have read and could not find any. I don't remember which ones I did read, but I can say that my memories of his writing were much better than what I got here. The writing is choppy, the character construction is non-existent, and the good moments (often more North Korea-based) are outnumbered by the bad.
While I have not read the national security thriller genre in a few months, they are a guilty pleasure of mine and I thoroughly enjoy the escape provided by authors such as Vince Flynn (R.I.P.) and David Baldacci. However, I just could not get into this book. Sure, this entire genre is about pandering to war hawks who want to drop a bomb on any nation that speaks against the U.S., but you don't have to do it so blatantly.
The plot here involves China trying to destroy the U.S. (using jihadis as middlemen) in order to claim the U.S. as their own as collateral for the mounting debt they have against us. North Korea, the Middle East, and Somalia are involved too! While many other reviews find that a believable, realistic plot line, I'm going to hold off my comments until the ludicrous ending (mentioned below under spoiler warnings).
The one thing I did find hilarious in this book as that the large group of likely baby boomer, former military white men that read this genre (I'm only 2 of those four!) have now been introduced to Grindr, a gay hook-up app, due to a plot line showing that hedonistic gay men will just do anything for drug-fueled gay sex with strangers, even compromising their mission and life purpose! (Note the sarcasm.)
*********** MAJOR SPOILER *************
So, the best example of the insanity of this plot line is the ending. As you would predict in this genre, the U.S. wins. (Still, I post a major spoiler alert because ... 'Murica?) What's ludicrous though is that, because the U.S. exposes China's plot against the U.S., China decides to relieve the U.S. of the trillions dollars of debt it has, just washing its hands clean because they lost "face." Umm ... no. Absolutely not. If exposing a Chinese plot against the U.S. got the U.S. discharged of all of its debts, I'm sure there are 100,000 cyber hacking missions that could be exposed by the time you finish this sentence.
But you don't read these books for accuracy (well, I don't). You read them for guilty pleasure enjoyment and this book failed at that mission. I have another Brad Thor book right now ($1 at a library sale), so let's hope that one is the Brad Thor I remember!