Above All, Honor cover

Above All, Honor

Honor • Book 1

4.18 Goodreads
(4.2K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

A Secret Service agent sworn to protect the President's daughter — and falling for her — is exactly as dangerous as it sounds.

  • Great if you want: forbidden romance with real professional stakes and emotional weight
  • The experience: tightly paced, charged with tension — short but surprisingly intense
  • The writing: Radclyffe builds attraction through restraint — what's held back hits harder
  • Skip if: you expect deep character backstory — the emotional depth builds across the series

About This Book

When duty and desire collide at the highest levels of American power, the consequences can be devastating. Secret Service Agent Cameron Roberts has built her entire identity around her work—it's the only structure keeping her upright after a private loss that would break most people. Her assignment: protect Blair Powell, the President's daughter, a woman as determined to escape her security detail as Cam is to maintain it. What unfolds is a charged, slow-burn tension between two people who understand each other far better than either would like to admit, set against a backdrop of genuine threat where the stakes are both professional and deeply personal.

Radclyffe writes romantic suspense with an economy of language that keeps the pages turning without sacrificing emotional depth. The prose is clean and purposeful—each scene doing double work, advancing both the plot and the complicated interior lives of these two women. As the first book in the Honor series, it establishes character with enough precision and restraint that readers feel they're discovering these people rather than being told who they are. It's a tight, confident opener that earns its tension honestly.