—A Disappointing Sequel After a Promising Start!—
The second installment in the Camp Honor series: A new terrorist strikes, throwing all of America into fear. Wyatt and his team try to neutralize Encyte—but Wyatt’s top priority is finding Hallsy, the man who killed Dolly, and getting revenge. He’s willing to do anything for that, even abandon his friends.
Honestly, I found this book a bit disappointing. I loved the first part and was really looking forward to another action-packed sequel. But what I got felt like a waste of potential.
The writing style remains more or less the same, and while the chapters stay in the present timeline, they constantly switch between way too many characters. I got to read from almost everyone’s perspective—but I was only ever interested in Wyatt’s parts. One chapter might be from the Secretary of Defense’s point of view, the next from one of her aides, then we’d briefly cut to the attackers, then Camp Honor, then Wyatt or Jalen, and then even Darsie’s life. All of these fragments never came together to form a cohesive story.
Just when something started to get interesting (which wasn’t that often), the chapter would switch to another person in another location. For example, if a conversation spanned three chapters, it would go like this: chapter 1 – conversation, chapter 2 – unrelated character, chapter 3 – continuation of conversation, chapter 4 – attacker, chapter 5 – end of conversation. That structure made it impossible for any real suspense or action to build. It drained the fun out of reading and made the novel feel like it dragged on forever.
Also, the title implies that the mission takes place at Camp Honor and that Wyatt would be the main character leading a successful operation with his friends. Instead… the story has almost nothing to do with the camp. In the end, the camp sends a team into a shootout, but otherwise plays no role. Wyatt goes rogue with a new character, and somehow Jalen—who wasn’t even in the first book—gets all the attention and basically becomes the hero. The promised heroic team? Completely missing.
Wyatt is only involved because he wants revenge for Dolly, his girlfriend from the first book. That book ended with a shocking cliffhanger—a picture of the abused Dolly—and I thought this would be a major storyline. Instead, it’s briefly mentioned that Dolly is dead and Hallsy is her killer. That’s it. A major shock, brushed aside. Wyatt only helps because Darsie promises to give him Hallsy’s location if the mission succeeds. And even then, Wyatt’s revenge is barely shown—it’s crammed into the epilogue.
I’ve listed quite a few reasons why this sequel didn’t work for me. The one redeeming quality? The storyline itself. There were a lot of unnecessary details, but the plot was well thought out. In the end, everything came together logically and was portrayed in a somewhat realistic way.
I would definitely recommend the first book. But the second one? A letdown. So don’t expect too much if you decide to continue reading the series.
Of course, that’s just my opinion—others might have enjoyed the sequel more.