This one was pretty run of the mill. In this one, Remo has to go up against a band of vigilante cops who are going around killing people they believe to be otherwise untouchable bad guys. I'm not a fan of the fact that the cops (and, sadly, Remo the protagonist) are pretty open about their racism, which is all done in the name of being "right wing." (The cops claim that repeatedly.) Along with that, there is a lot of mocking of liberals and the fact that a liberal police commissioner's daughter is raped by a group of black men is found hilarious by the other cops. I know these books are "of their time," and I don't like to get too much into the racial and political aspects of these books, but it is unavoidable here. This one seemed to try to go above and beyond in terms of overt racism and pro-cop vigilantism. This isn't a complaint just because we live in 2021. I'm not some "safe space" cancel culture guy, but there is some legitimately grotesque stuff in this book that I would have had a problem with at the time of its release had I been old enough to have read it and understood it. (I was born the year this book was released.)
Beyond those awful aspects, this book, the ninth in the series, was woefully bland in terms of story and characterization. There's not even a memorable action sequence in it. The book offered nothing new or even bothered to give a twist on things readers had already seen in the previous eight books. This one flat out sucked in just about every way possible. This was easily the worst of the first nine books. Plus, it was already becoming ridiculously formulaic and it's clear that Murphy and Sapir were just checking off boxes of needed ingredients (i.e. sex, violence, humor, etc.). I would only recommend this to completists. God help anyone who reads this as their first Destroyer book, as it would likely be their last.