Somebody put the wrong bullets in the box. The calibers aren’t
matching up. Dan Schmidt’s fourth novel in his team-based 'Eagle Force' line is
out of sequence from the other books. Events and locations are all out of whack
as if the author wrote this book before the second and third entries. Not only
is the book missing series mythology, it’s also poorly written. Schmidt doesn’t
have the same energetic pace or attention to action based sequences that move
the book forward from A to B. It’s just a complete mess.
The first 'Eagle Force' book, “Contract for Slaughter”,
ultimately assembled the team through the typical recruitment process and some
flashback sequences to show history of the characters. The mission to rescue an
heiress from the clutches of Islamic extremists was a failure but it led to the
creation of the team and some funds to acquire gear and guns. In the opening
pages of book two, “Death Camp Columbia”, protagonist Vic Gabriel (Eagle Force
leader) recalls the team’s second mission on the icy slopes of Nepal. The
mission left the team with a relocated headquarters from the Florida Everglades
to Pyrenees along the French-Spanish border. It also mentions that the team
dismantled a CIA kill-force and Soviet SPETSNAZ. The problem? That mission was
never explained to the reader. As we begin book two it is really just the team’s
second mission that the reader has experienced. All of the events mentioned
never occurred in book format. These are just mentioned but never fully
explained. The reader just has to assume the author never elaborates on it further
and just takes the jump in the timeline and location and moves on. Thus, we
have a new headquarters and the next missions which roll out in book two, “Death
Camp Colombia”, and book three, “Flight 666”.
Book four, this current review, is called “Red Firestorm”.
However, it isn’t really book four. Instead this is the entire mission
mentioned in the opening pages of book two. So, it’s out of chronological order
which makes me think two things must have occurred. Either the publisher agreed
with me and decided that this book just absolutely sucks and sit it to the side
and released the vastly improved books out of sequence hoping readers would
identify more with the team, characters and Schmidt’s normally otherwise
well-written action formula. The other thought was that maybe Schmidt had never
planned on actually telling this story and then had second thoughts. Nevertheless,
we have book four at our disposal and it’s really just book two in disguise.
At the beginning of “Red Firestorm” we get a little payback
from Zak Dillinger and Johnny Simms on a local drug cartel in Miami. It’s
clearly written right after the events of book one and has Dillinger and Simms
locked into a firefight in a small club. Half of Eagle Force walks out alive
and that’s that. The next sequence has a CIA task-force arrive at Eagle Force
camp in the Florida Everglades to offer a proposition. It turns out that some
upgraded U2 aircraft flown by the CIA (or it’s colleagues) over Russia crashed
in the Himalayas on Mt. Makalu, also known as the fifth highest mountain in the
world. The aircraft were flying surveillance and spying on Ivan’s nuclear
capabilities. The wreckage includes Sphinx black boxes which will not only show
the data of the mission but also create some serious red flags if Russian can
report that the US were violating airspace. The CIA wants Eagle Force to prevent
WWIII. Why don’t they use their own people? Why ask Eagle Force, a team that
has no experience climbing in the Himalayas? These are great questions that the
author apparently never asked.
From there this book is an absolute train wreck and feels really
disjointed. Russia’s Kremlin send a team into the regions on and around Mt.
Mikalu. They shove around the locals and create a few skirmishes. Of course,
Eagle Force is in the area as well but the two never really exchange gunfire
until the last couple of pages. The big confrontation never comes to fruition.
Also, these black boxes could be anywhere yet the two factions are able to find
them with relative ease. That’s illogical writing. It’s lazy. The hardships of
climbing the mountain, surviving the elements and the hunt itself should have
been the main focus of the book. It would have added just one more set of
super-skills to our paperback warrior team. The author spends way too much time
on the village, Eagle Force corresponding with the village and some quick
chapters on a pilot trying to survive after the crash. It just never gets up to
full speed and leaves the reader bored to tears. The end of the book explains
why the team is in a different headquarters at the beginning of book two. It definitely fills in the blanks retroactively.
Overall I think the book’s disjointed writing style left the
publisher with no other choice but to keep the book’s release on hiatus until
better quality stories were developed by the author. Once books two and three
were released I’m sure they felt the series had a large enough fan-base to
support a not-so-good book. Let’s hope for better things with book five, “Reign
of Fire”.
Buy a copy of this book HERE
Buy a copy of this book HERE
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