Indeed, Gideon Crew, takes us with him on his adventures each more disturbing than each other, with a speed that does not change the first volume. This reading is fluid and extremely fast. All actions are linked without having the time to say "whew" through multiple and short chapters. For readers who wish to follow an easy read, these books are for you.
This story's main character, Gideon Crew, still present. But there are also other characters that evolve around it without one pays attention. Gideon takes considerable place in history as in the previous matter. It is still in this volume accompanied by an FBI agent who helps him in his mission, but it will never replace Gideon. This character is still the same as in the first volume, always willing to lie to get his way in his mission.
In this volume, the relationship with reality is twice as far as the authors use terrorism but also nuclear power to illustrate and make their story even more real. Topical subjects who find out their place in this story. Although realism is very well represented in this series, I find that there is still some surreal elements that can leave the reader thinking.
In this second volume, certain actions are predictable unlike R for Revenge. We arrive to guess what is about to make the main character while in the first volume, each new chapter surprised by its originality.
Gideon Crew missions are very involved and has no desire to put the book down once you dipped it. This story consists of exciting investigations, suspense, twists but also a touch of love makes the addictive novel. There still has a negative point: each new mission Gideon Crew follows a little always the same thread and the end is known. Gideon will always come out despite the trials and I'm afraid that as and measurement of volumes, the authors more difficult to surprise their readers. I look forward to know if there will be a third book because I'd like to know if it will exceed the first two volumes with an original story and new adventures even more unpredictable than the previous volumes. We'll see later ...