Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Article Five: A World War Three Novel

Rate this book
It was supposed to be a fool proof plan… Until the world caught fire.

When a newly elected U.S. President abandons NATO, Russia seizes the opportunity to strike, launching a full-scale invasion of Estonia. As Europe stands alone, British forces scramble to hold the line against an unstoppable enemy.

In London, MI6 operative John Rafferty hunts a Russian defector—until a sleeper agent turns the streets into a war zone. At sea, Commander Anderson of HMS Daring fights to keep critical supply routes open as Russian warships close in. On the frontlines, Sergeant Johnson and his tank crew face overwhelming odds in a desperate battle for survival. And in the shadows, a traitor at the highest level is pulling the strings, tipping the balance of war.

From the corridors of power to the heart of the battlefield, Article Five is a pulse-pounding geopolitical thriller where loyalty is fragile, alliances are crumbling, and the world is one misstep away from global catastrophe.

Will NATO’s most sacred principle—Article Five—hold? Or has the first domino of World War Three just fallen?

Fans of Tom Clancy, Mark Greaney, and Frederick Forsyth won’t be able to put down this gripping, high-stakes military thriller.

341 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 7, 2025

55 people are currently reading

About the author

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
22 (35%)
4 stars
24 (38%)
3 stars
12 (19%)
2 stars
3 (4%)
1 star
1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Book Reviewer.
285 reviews28 followers
February 15, 2026
Article Five, by J.D. Duncan, is a geopolitical military thriller that kicks off with coordinated attacks and covert sabotage that shove NATO toward its most frightening promise: collective defense. We bounce between the pressure-cooker halls of London, field operations chasing a sleeper agent tied to bombings near St Paul's tube station, and the widening war footprint stretching to places like Estonia and Moscow. The spine of the plot follows Prime Minister Powell as he tries to hold the line politically and morally while Tony Abbott and John Rafferty chase the human machinery behind the chaos, including Andrew Barker and an injured would-be defector, Gregov Maximov. It all drives toward a tense, exhausted ceasefire and a messy “angry peace,” not a clean victory.

What I liked most is how the book moves. Duncan uses tight point-of-view hops and quick location stamps to keep you aware of the board while still letting you feel the sweat in the room. Powell’s sections especially land for me because they aren’t written like a superhero fantasy. They feel like a person trying to sound steady while everything is shaking, including the uncomfortable reality that allies might hesitate when you need them most. The action scenes are crisp without turning into a tech brochure. There’s a memorable early sequence with a special forces team taking down a Russian helicopter to grab its electronics, and you can almost smell the burning fuel and wet forest in the aftermath. It’s the kind of detail that makes the genre work: specific enough to feel real, but still readable if you don’t speak “military” fluently.

I also appreciated the author’s willingness to sit in the moral grey. The spy stuff isn’t framed as glamorous. It’s transactional, paranoid, and sometimes petty in a relatable way. Rafferty, for example, is funny and sharp, but also tired, cynical, and constantly measuring people for leverage. That energy pairs well with the book’s bigger idea: wars are not only fought with tanks and missiles, but with narratives, timing, and information control. Maximov’s “evidence hidden in plain sight” angle, tucked into something as mundane as a fishing-rod website, is a perfect little metaphor for modern conflict. And Barker’s thread, from coerced bombing logistics to his end, left me cold in the right way. It’s not melodramatic. It’s bleak, brisk, and believable.

I’d recommend Article Five to readers who like their thrillers political, modern, and a little unsettling, the kind that makes you put the book down for a second and think. If your happy place is the Tom Clancy and Brad Thor lane, but you want something with a more current-media pulse (there’s even a nod to BBC coverage and the churn of online commentary), you’ll probably have a good time here. It’s best for people who enjoy big-stakes geopolitics and the smaller, grimy human choices underneath it, and who don’t need a tidy ending to feel satisfied.
Profile Image for Renae Richardson.
274 reviews2 followers
October 21, 2025
This book is an absolute full-throttle read. It opens right in the thick of the action, and though its following chapters ease into a slow simmer, it never loses its grip. The intrigue deepens as readers are invited to piece together the true scope of an international conflict that only grows more volatile as the story unfolds.

From the first pages, we’re dropped into a skirmish of soldiers on a mission of staggering importance, operating behind enemy lines under relentless fire. The writing carries a pulse-pounding intensity at times and a contemplative tone at others. The vivid descriptions reveal an author who invested time in building an almost intimate familiarity in the nuances of warfare, espionage, and global operations.

But that’s just the beginning. As the narrative expands, it pulls us deeper into the heart of something far greater—a layered, back-and-forth journey that tracks multiple players as tensions mount toward the brink of full-scale war.
What gives this book its extra punch are the timely political threads that have been woven throughout. The time period of the piece, the national actors, and the very familiar points of interest all give it a very eerie undertone.

The story isn’t just a fictional exercise in strategy and conflict; it touches on real-world anxieties and the most chilling prospect of all in today’s geopolitical climate—“Article Five.” That hits with a chilling sense of realism—a reminder of just how fragile that line between peace and war can be.
23 reviews1 follower
September 25, 2025
Article Five: A World War Three Novel by J. D. Duncan is a gripping military thriller that vividly imagines the outbreak of global conflict after a dramatic shift in international alliances. Combining political intrigue, espionage, and high-stakes combat. The narrative explores themes of loyalty, betrayal, and the fragility of alliances with chilling relevance. Brisk pacing and relentless action keep the story moving, while the blend of realism and suspense makes the danger feel all the more immediate. Riveting and disturbingly plausible, this novel is a must-read for fans of modern military thrillers.
Profile Image for Anna Sainclivier.
44 reviews1 follower
September 30, 2025
This novel is a great read. The author, J.D. Duncan sets a fast pace from the very beginning of the book. The characters take on a life of their own and the action is excellent. I like the building suspense and how it kept me wanting to read. I believe the story and its premise was believable because the author had a way of explaining events in a well-written and realistic way. Duncan has a way of making you think and question the reality around you. The scary prospect of something like this possibly happening comes to life because of the momentum he builds while giving us a quality narrative. I would recommend this book to fans of political thrillers. It is definitely worth the read!
Profile Image for Hassan.
47 reviews
September 27, 2025
Article Five: A World War Three Novel by J. D. Duncan is a fast-paced and gripping thriller that explores the fragility of alliances and the terrifying possibility of global conflict.

The narrative moves seamlessly between political intrigue, battlefield action, and personal struggle, giving readers a sense of both the scale and cost of war.

This book will resonate with fans of both military thrillers and political dramas. It’s an intense, thought-provoking read that entertains while raising unsettling questions about the precarious balance of power in the modern world.
13 reviews
October 7, 2025
This story takes readers into a world on the brink of World War III, where shifting alliances and espionage drive the tension. The pace is fast, and the action feels constant without losing focus on the characters.
I liked how John Rafferty’s determination and intelligence make the story engaging while keeping it grounded in realism. The mix of politics, loyalty, and survival adds depth to the plot, making it a compelling and thought-provoking military thriller.
3 reviews
January 31, 2026
good in parts

This is good in parts but let down by very poor attention to detail . For instance a RAF flight lieutenant is equivalent to an Army captain and is never referred to as Lieutenant. The uk lost Rapier missiles in 2021, Nimrod aircraft in 2011, and Hercules in 2023
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.