The fight against terrorism has reached the next level— and now America will really go to war.A series of cataclysmic events is exploding around the world. Two divisions of Chinese ground troops move against a neighboring Muslim nation, while a provocation unleashes generations of pent-up violence between the mainland and Taiwan. With U.S. troops still on the ground in the Middle East and “Ganistan,” and an American president forced by rapidly unfolding events to make decisions on the fly, the most dangerous threat is the one no one sees. For off the fog-shrouded coast of Washington State, a staggering attack will flood the Northwest with American refugees and force the bravest and the best of U.S. Special Forces under the toughest of the tough, General Douglas Freeman, into a pitched, desperate battle to find a shadow enemy—before he strikes the next terrifying blow against the United States.
Ian Slater is a thriller writer based in Vancouver, Canada. He has authored twenty-three adventure thrillers, including Firespill, Sea Gold, Air Glow Red, Storm, Deep Chill, Forbidden Zone, MacArthur Must Die, Showdown, Battle Front, and Manhunt. He is also known for his World War III series, which includes eleven stand-alone books, among them WW III: DARPA Alpha. In addition to fiction, he has written Orwell: The Road to Airstrip One, a widely praised study of George Orwell’s social and political thought. He served as editor of the academic quarterly Pacific Affairs for twelve years and has contributed book reviews to major North American newspapers. His work also extends to film and radio, having written and produced radio dramas and short stories for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, as well as the screenplay for the National Film Board’s animated film Flash Point. Before turning to writing, Slater held various roles, including working for the Australian navy, serving as a cipher clerk for the country’s Department of External Affairs, and acting as a defense officer for the Australian Joint Intelligence Bureau. He later worked as a marine geology technician, undertaking research voyages in the Pacific. Holding a doctorate in political science, he has taught courses in the humanities as both an author and lecturer.
I can say that the more of this series I read, the less impressed I am.
Books 1 through 7 were a complete story line set in one universe where word war 3 had started, book 8, South China Sea had events which conflicted with what happened in the first 7 books then along comes Choke Point, book number 9 - coming back are Brentwood & Co that were left out of South China Sea, however once again this book conflicts with earlier events in the series, not only with the first 7 books, but also the events of South China Sea. Thereby making this a third storyline which included elements from the first 7 books, but not others, and also alludes to events which have not occurred in any of the books that sound like they would have been interesting.
There's two more books left in the series and I really hope it either continues on from here properly, or from book 7 rather than this bizarre scheme that has gone on with the last two books, which frankly is quite poor.
Not only is it always improbable what happens in the straight, I mean first we talking mines, OK. Three of them, then the sub comes back and torpedoes a 98k t aircraft carrier
Then they look for it, then the helo coming to it's hiding bay hits the foliage on a cliff crashes and explodes, not to talk about the surface fight in the bay nor the search for the sub afterwards