The Outlaws (Presidential Agent, Book 6)
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.32 (729 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0515150274 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 656 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-03-23 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
Petersburg, Florida. W. E. He lives in St. B. Griffin is the author of seven bestselling series: The Corps, Brotherhood of War, Badge of Honor, Men at War, Honor Bound, Presidential Agent, and now Clandestine Operations. He lives in Fairhope, Alabama, and Buenos Aires, Argentina. William E. He is the coauthor of sev
Not W.E.B. Griffin quality I just have to say wow! I wish who ever wrote this book had taken the time to read the other books in the series and not just cliff notes. I knew right away that I was in for a long read on this one. I bought the audio book. Other than a few minutes of stage setting at the start, it took over 2 hours to get past the initial "here is what happened in the other books of the series". I am used to Griffin books screwing up small details like names or titles. The first screw up was referring to what had been Madsen machineguns in the original books to a Kalashnikov in this on. Waste of time - Nothing new - Not worthy to be read I enjoyed the first few books in The Presidential Agent series by W.E.B. Griffin, but The Outlaws was a true disappointment. The Waste of time - Nothing new - Not worthy to be read J-Man I enjoyed the first few books in The Presidential Agent series by W.E.B. Griffin, but The Outlaws was a true disappointment. The 432-page book should have been a 120-page short story. This is not worth your time. Wait another one or two years until the next installment. Hopefully Griffin will then produce a worthy follow-up story.The good: The plot was enjoyable.The bad: Too many pages for very little content. The backstory was repeated for way too many pages. The content from this book was repeated numerous times throughout the novel. Very little action. Very little pol. 32-page book should have been a 120-page short story. This is not worth your time. Wait another one or two years until the next installment. Hopefully Griffin will then produce a worthy follow-up story.The good: The plot was enjoyable.The bad: Too many pages for very little content. The backstory was repeated for way too many pages. The content from this book was repeated numerous times throughout the novel. Very little action. Very little pol. Continued Disappointment The latest in the Presidential Agent series continues the downward spiral that has been the last several installments. The author has continued to "tweak" (read: outright change for no discernible reason) the once interesting and unique backstory that he had created for Charley. First it was Eric Kocian magically becoming much more involved with young Karl's life in the last several books. Now, the author has completely ret-conned Charley's transfer to working with McNabb originally, as well as making Naylor out to be first, an ass, and later (actually in flashback) an i
And when a barrel of nightmarishly lethal material is shipped to an Army medical lab, Castillo knows that the people behind it are just getting started. Charley Castillo and his colleagues have retired, and there is an adversarial Commander-in-Chief in the Oval Office. The former Presidential Agent's Office of Organizational Analysis has been disbanded. But just because Castillo is out of the government doesn't mean he's out of business
president, who hates Charley's guts, wants to turn him over to Putin along with the two defectors. He soon becomes entangled in intrigue involving several barrels of virulent biological weaponry and a demand from Vladimir Putin to return the two Russian spies who defected in Black Ops. Series fans who love these characters will find the novel fulfilling; newcomers and those expecting a big payoff will be disappointed. Carlos "Charley" Castillo to disband his secret organization, the Office of Organizational Analysis, and t