Maybe it's more like a 1.5, but I'm feeling far too salty to round up.
The only good thing I have to say is that the style isn't bad. The writing is clean and sharp, and I can appreciate how the authors utilize language. I just wish it felt like there was something actually happening.
It's a very aestheticized version of the drug trade, I think, highly romanticized and one-note; the strength seems to be in the action sequences, with the characters feeling purely like 'furniture' - particularly Diane, despite how she's framed as the lead. She seems to have such a minor presence, and what's there is so flat; no character comes across as truly developed, but she seems to suffer the most, defined strictly by the men she's surrounded by and her sexuality and 'beauty'.
Tomas is by far the most developed character, but he just feels like a caricature with his gratuitous Spanish (that doesn't feel natural at all.) I found myself able to actually sympathize with him, but only barely.
Overall, I'm just lost on the point. The plot is vague, especially near the end, where the writers finally seem to remember Diane is the main character, and rush through the aftermath and consequences; the open-endedness only furthers the frustration felt during the entire story. I just don't care for how dismissive an attitude the writers seemed to have when describing the dirty tactics and abuse of power Diane and every other agent committed. The portrait painted of Mexico feels rather racist, diminished to nothing but drugs and the cartel and sicarios. I hated every second I wasted on this trash and trying to write this review somewhat cohesively (and constructively.)
I received an ARC via netgalley in exchange for an honest review.