Reviews

The Insider Threat by Brad Taylor

sunny76's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Another excellent Pike Logan novel with terrorists on the other side. More involvement with Aaron and Shoshana in this book.

leftyjonesq's review

Go to review page

fast-paced

5.0

jamjimham's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Received a copy from Goodreads Giveaway

Brad Taylor has written one action packed novel with The Insider Threat.
This story is a bit fast paced and leaves little breathing room going from local to local. But each location has a purpose and didn’t feel like filler. It was nice to see the inner conflicts within ISIS and the terror groups they branched off from. Everything had a place and made sense.
What I am really liking with Brad Taylor’s novels is the strong female character. Jennifer. Even though she is *living* in a man’s world of counter-terrorism. She isn’t weakened by it or lets Taskforce treat her has a sub on the team. Pike Logan is a no holds bar kind of character. And the first person perspective from Pike is great.

If you’re looking for a solid action packed read. That is easy to follow and has a few twists and turns. You can’t go wrong with this book

jmcguoirk's review against another edition

Go to review page

4.0

Dang. That ending. Thanks BT.

stcy's review against another edition

Go to review page

5.0

Liked the exposition and how there were multiple targets. Unique in that the topic is very very current - ISIS/ISIL. Highly entertaining.

brettt's review against another edition

Go to review page

3.0

One of the knocks on the practice of "profiling" terrorists is that eventually it won't work, as the terrorist organizations find recruits who don't fit the profile -- and may even look more like the people down the block than the fanatical faces on the evening news.

Brad Taylor gives a group of such sleeper agents the name "The Lost Boys" because of the history he creates for them and lets the extralegal Task Force gain a hint of them and their plans. Pike Logan and his team have to track their few known leads to even get on the Lost Boys' trail, let alone try to catch up or know where it will end up. And once on that trail, the one thing they do find is that time is not their friend in The Insider Threat.

Former Special Forces soldier Taylor has given his Pike Logan series a healthy dose of realism when it comes to combat and the stress it brings, especially when the combatants face each other from the shadows of espionage operations and not across an open battlefield. He continues to do that in this latest story, showing Pike and his team members often on the frayed edge of stress overload fighting both enemies and the clock. Threat is more scattershot than some earlier books in the series, with what seems like a wrinkle too many and a couple of unneeded cast members to follow and mine for motives and information.

The action scenes still pop, though, and the tension the characters face feels real even if Taylor's prose style is still pretty meat-and-potatoes and he's still on the learning curve of figuring out how to show his readers things instead of telling them. Pike and his team-mate Jennifer are continuing to develop in their own character arcs and two newer cast-mates, the Mossad agents Aaron and Shoshana, are given more screen time to find their own best fit in the narrative. The Pike Logan series remains an important and enjoyable one for the espionage thriller fan.

Original may be found here.
More...