These people, who have their stay and training center in the Obermeyer Institute, are gifted with psychic abilities (telepathy, the ability to break through with their thoughts walls to open locks, immobilize people with thoughts, etc). This provides the author ample opportunity yet to increase the otherwise settled in the SEALS Super skills and lead their heroes to truly hair-raising situations. But of course the main character in this book is also a SEAL again, but a beached, who was dishonorably discharged. (Its history is told in detail in the very intense story 'Shane's Last Stand', that there is little money for an e-book).
The plot is pretty exciting, even if the author in this book needs more time to introduce the new characters and all their varied and very different abilities. As always, all people are totally three-dimensional and alive - I love Brockmanns types! One feels well in this 'gang' is at home: there is the friendly and Bissigen that heterosexuals and gays, and all are highly intelligent. A bit is the protagonist Mac slipped into clichés (difficult childhood, so now very bitchy and also endowed with a somewhat unoriginal Super Talent, which I will not reveal), but, my, the book is indeed not a candidate for the Nobel Prize.
The love story of the SEALs, the (rescuing the girls who were kidnapped by the Destiny-producers) as a supporting element is subject to the actual voltage support the story is touching, but so entirely as I could cheer not. The weaknesses here I came in the character representation of his partner Mac in the way that was me just a little too annoying.
I had the impression that Brockmann's not really so familiar with the SF genre towards the end. Few developments are illogical and the final showdown is a bit confusing, but I forgive her - she will already have a new life and the other books of this scale as a series history will surely bring the usual highlights again.