Saturday, August 06, 2022

Target Zero (Agent Zero #2) ★★★☆☆

 


This review is written with a GPL 4.0 license and the rights contained therein shall supersede all TOS by any and all websites in regards to copying and sharing without proper authorization and permissions. Crossposted at WordPress, Blogspot, & Librarything by Bookstooge’s Exalted Permission
Title: Target Zero
Series: Agent Zero #2
Authors: Jack Mars
Rating: 3 of 5 Stars
Genre: Thriller
Pages: 285
Words: 97.5K





Synopsis:



Kent Steele, aka Reid Lawson, aka Agent Zero, is trying to piece his life back together after the events of the last book. He hasn't made a decision about returning to the CIA or not, his relationship with his oldest daughter is getting rocky as she is smart enough to realize things don't add up and Lawson continues to get back old memories, all of which throw doubt on everything he thought he knew about himself and his wife.


A terrorist group weaponizes a small pox strain and it's up to Agent Zero and his team to stop it. At the same time, the assassin from the previous book escapes and goes hunting after Zero's daughter to use as bait.


Zero stops the plague from destroying the world but the book ends on a cliffhanging concerning his daughters and the assassin. We also find out there is yet another vast and worldwide conspiracy about “something”, again and that Zero's current love interest might be involved.




My Thoughts:


This has some really nice action scenes, but there are a couple of jarring notes that I suspect will doom this series for me.


First, stupid actions by smart people to drive the plot on. For example, the team needs one of the terrorists alive to interrogate him (enhancedly if need be) but one of the other team members shoots him dead “because he might have been a threat”. Oh my goodness. These are supposed to be highly trained professionals but they act more like characters on a tv show, sigh.


Second, the family drama. Lawson has been hiding his secret identity as Zero all these years and it's only NOW, in the worst imaginable time, that he begins to wonder how to deal with it? And he's stymied by his 16 year old daughter? Should have thought of the future Mr Agent Man before getting married and trying to pretend to be normal. Once again, it came across as Hollywood'esque.


Thirdly, the liberal guilt tripping and gun hate. Every time Zero can't save everyone in a situation, he starts bad talking himself and blaming himself. Now, guilt is a natural thing but the phrases used and the word choices are straight out of Liberal Guilt Tactics 101. The person doing the killing isn't the bad guy, YOU are the badguy because you didn't stop them. It is the most illogical and stupid piece of rhetoric and it makes me angry, because it is deliberately dishonest. The gun thing is all about Zero having memories of his wife finding one of his hidden safe guns (he had 11 around the house) and she totally trashes the very concept of gun ownership. Couple that with his daughter's question about her learning to shoot after the incident in the previous book and Zero's active avoidance to teach her, well, it left a bad taste in my mouth.


With all of that, the book was still really interesting. Like I said at first, the action is really good and that is what carried me through despite everything else I've mentioned. I'm going to read the next book but if any of those 3 things I mentioned above show up, I'll be done. If I want to watch a tv show, with all the attendant weaknesses, I'll go do that. I don't need that in my books, thank you very much.


★★★☆☆




No comments:

Post a Comment