Charlie West (with young Larry's timely intervention) saved the day at the end of The Truth of the Matter, helping Detective Rose apprehend top members of the Homelanders terrorist group, but those accomplishments came at a price. Charlie has been remanded to Abingdon State Prison to serve his sentence for the murder of Alex Hauser and his subsequent escape from police custody, though he now knows he didn't kill Alex. The Homelanders have confirmed Charlie as a traitor to their cause, an American patriot who couldn't be corrupted, and they want him dead. Numerous Homelander agents among Abingdon's prison population are ready to kill for their bosses, but Charlie has some unexpected supporters: incarcerated neo-Nazis, who fight on Charlie's behalf for no other reason than to antagonize the Islamists. The Nazi leader, a sadist known as Blade, has an offer for Charlie: join their escape attempt through the prison sewers, and Blade will guarantee Charlie's survival until then. With the Islamists a perpetual threat—as well as the "Yard King", Chuck Dunbar, who runs his prison like a mob boss and despises Charlie—hooking on with the Nazis might be Charlie's only chance. Can he reconcile himself to allying with a hate group?
While Charlie tries to stay alive, two separate visitors show up to conference with him. The first is Detective Rose, secret liaison of the government task force Charlie had signed on with to infiltrate the Homelanders a year ago. The main players in the Homelanders organization are behind bars, Rose reports, except for Prince, the most dangerous of them all. But the government wants to pretend the Homelanders were an isolated cell, that no problem with Islamic terror exists in the United States. They refuse to acknowledge Charlie's role with the program to nab the Homelanders; thus, his fabricated murder conviction stands. How could the government strand him in Abingdon when Charlie risked everything to help them? Rose vows not to stop pushing for Charlie's exoneration, but time is running out. When Sensei Mike visits later, and Charlie hints that he's considering a jailbreak with the Nazis, Mike urges him not to do anything rash, but there isn't much choice. The time to move is now.
An explosive sequence of events hustles Charlie and his quasi-allies out of Abingdon with the police hot on their tails. With freedom in reach, Blade and his Nazis become as big a threat to Charlie as the Homelanders, and he must elude them to go on the lam from the law. Among Charlie's recently restored memories is a spy outing he took almost a year ago, which ended when the Homelanders caught him snooping at their headquarters and ordered him executed. He recalls hearing Prince speak of the organization's most ambitious terrorist attack yet, but the details of the memory remain hazy. Something is going to happen soon, and as long as the authorities won't accept Charlie as a credible information source, only he can stop Prince. He needs to clarify what he remembers right now, or his government service in opposition to the Homelanders—which tore him away from his family, friends, and girlfriend, Beth—will have been for nought. How and where would Prince launch an all-out terrorist strike on the U.S.?
Joined by friends who played important parts in the first three Homelanders novels, Charlie travels to where he believes Prince plans to attack, all the while stalked by terrorists. The Homelanders employ every resource they have left against Charlie and his companions. At any moment Prince will release his hidden weapon to massacre millions of innocents in the name of Islamo-fascism. As the resistance nears Prince's base of operations, Charlie's crew is taken out of commission one by one until it's only him and Prince battling over the fate of an American metropolis. Can Charlie win out against men more powerful than he will ever be? And how many of his friends will make the ultimate sacrifice for America to emerge injured but unbowed?
"We all want the same thing, I guess. Killers or no, good or bad. We all want to be free. We all want to go home."
—The Final Hour, P. 158
Dramatic personal growth was necessary for Charlie the high-schooler at the start of this series to triumph against such unlikely odds. Not a book goes by without him having to stand firm against the enemy at enormous cost. Charlie's father instilled these values in him, but Sensei Mike helped them grow. "Mike taught me that, whatever the situation, whether I was outnumbered, outsmarted, or even beaten and at the end of my rope, I could always ask myself a simple question: How can I come out of this stronger? Better?...He talked about how, in karate, whether you did well or badly, whether you won or lost, whether you got good breaks or suffered bad luck, there was always a path forward...to a better, stronger life. He taught me that if you look for that path hard enough, you will always find it." Even if the worst happens and your future is a shambles, the best thing to do is focus on strengthening yourself through the experience and prepare for what comes next, however difficult it will be. There is more hope than you're able to see in the midst of crisis.
Terrorism is a complicated area of government policy. How should global and domestic responsibilities balance out? Hardcore fiends will take advantage if politicians are too easy on foreign terrorists, which is what Prince is counting on. "When you attack Americans, they don't make themselves stronger, they make themselves weaker. They say to themselves, 'Oh, if only we are nicer to our enemies, they will see how wonderful we are and come to love us. They will stop being angry at us'...They don't understand that this is warfare in the name of God, warfare to the death. Two ways of life, two ways of looking at the world that can't be reconciled. One must live and the other must perish." Charlie has seen the Homelanders' evil up close, but those who haven't tend to downplay the threat. Taking it seriously is the only way to avoid mass bloodshed, and people like Charlie are needed to wage the war that most civilized folks shy from. Apologists for the other side play clever games of strawmen arguments and non-sequiturs, but their reasoning is fatally flawed, as Charlie understands. "(I)t's not a question whether your country is perfect or imperfect; it's a question of whether it's free or not free." Perfection isn't required for a nation to be good. Individual freedom and accountability is the only way to maintain a good society, and as long as that's not infringed on, we live to the highest potential of tarnished human nature. However Charlie's story ends, his ideals are right and his mission noble.
Andrew Klavan's debut YA series is filled with drama, action, and a fair amount of unpredictability. Unlike most series, I consider the middle books—The Long Way Home and The Truth of the Matter—the best Homelanders novels, with The Last Thing I Remember and The Final Hour a bit less engaging. All four are good, though, a superb execution of an imaginative and philosophically robust story idea. The payoff for following Charlie's odyssey from book one is substantial, and I'm glad I did. I'd rate The Final Hour at least two and a half stars, and I recommend the series for anyone who favors solid narrative undergirded by moral values. You won't be disappointed by the story or characters Andrew Klavan creates.