I’m a big fan of Poyer’s past work. In fact, except for his Civil War-era novels, I’ve read all of his books, and as different as they are (ranging from modern war-at-sea novels to a look back to rural Pennsylvania in the 1930s) they’ve all been excellent. Sadly, though, I don’t think The Threat is up to his past standards.
Dan Lenson, the main character here, is probably the luckiest sailor alive. He’s survived having his ship run over by an aircraft carrier, attempts on his life by angry crewmen, getting blown up by the Iranian Navy, becoming lost in the Canadian Yukon, being tortured by Saddam’s Revolutionary Guard, and having a low-yield nuclear weapon detonated abeam the first ship he actually got to command. After all this excitement, being named to the National Security Council as the chief of the counterdrug office seems like it would be a letdown. Lenson quickly makes an impact in his new job, which results in him being shuffled off to join the rotation of military aides who carry the nuclear “football”. Sinister forces are at work behind the assignment, though; the sitting President is a dishonest sleazebag who is loathed by the military– some of whom may be plotting to assassinate him and pin the blame on a convenient target. Like, say, a decorated-but-unstable military officer whose wife just left him. Yeah, that’s the ticket.
Poyer still has the exquisite eye for detail, and description that he has long had, but because he turns it to the political arena it doesn’t have nearly the same impact as it does when he describes the high-speed chess of battles at sea, or even the quieter poetry of the sounds and sights of a ship under way. The plot development was regrettably predictable, and the good and bad guys are straight from Thriller 101. There are some memorable scenes (like when the President faces a hostile crowd of grunts at a field base in Africa), but overall this wasn’t up to the standards of Poyer’s previous books. You might still enjoy this, but if you’re new to his series start with The Med or one of the Tiller Galloway series.
