The third in the series and once again a fantastic read. We are introduced to the tiny British garrison on Belize – a training patrol and a handful of support staff. At the same time, the Guatemalan army is massing on the border. Belize is about to be invaded by its vastly larger neighbour, and the remnants of a force that defended what was once an important central American outpost of the empire must face overwhelming odds to keep Belize safe.
Set in perhaps the early-90s, British forces are suffering after a decade budget cuts, and the feats of the Falklands are becoming a memory – a few of the men involved are veterans, but this is the next generation. A few of the heroes from HMS Beaufort (the King’s Shilling by the same author) are reintroduced. The patrol that noticed the imminent invasion are heading home for some much-needed R&R, but they have to turn around mid-flight and resupply in Florida before returning to the humid jungle just days after leaving.
Lunnon-Wood has a brilliant ability to make you care about his characters. There are scenes where you are desperate for the idiotically heroic action to be successful because you don’t want to ‘lose’ the character. The details of the fighting are first class, and the research is evident – for me there is just enough detail, just enough technical information. Some authors in this genre overwhelm the story and characters with infinitesimal details, but L-W avoids this. Spud, Plonker, Rees and Rhah. Tyson Davis Sophie, Helen and the rest make this worth reading.
Overall, an excellent read and I already have the last book in the British Military Quartet on my kindle waiting to go. The problem is, it’s the last one – there will be no more as L-W unfortunately passed away a few years ago. Once I’ve read it, I will have to find another to take his place, and that is a tall order. But, given the quality of the previous three, I imagine I will not wait long to read it.