Edge of Anarchy cover

Edge of Anarchy

Noah Wolf • Book 11

4.43 Goodreads
(2.1K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

The mission this time isn't to stop an assassination — it's to decide whether to carry one out against their own handler.

  • Great if you want: spy fiction where loyalty and orders pull in opposite directions
  • The experience: fast-moving and tense, built around a genuinely uncomfortable moral dilemma
  • The writing: Archer keeps the plot tight and the stakes personal without overexplaining
  • Skip if: you haven't read earlier entries — character payoff depends on prior investment

About This Book

When loyalty becomes a liability and duty points a gun at a friend, what does a covert team do? Edge of Anarchy drops Team Camelot into a mission that starts as familiar tradecraft—infiltration, deception, a dangerous identity to inhabit—and then twists into something far more personal. Jenny must inhabit the skin of a known assassin, working her way inside a terrorist network with real targets and real consequences. The deeper she gets, the harder the exit. David Archer builds the tension around an impossible question: what happens when the mission itself becomes the threat to the people you're fighting to protect?

Archer's strength here is economy. At 272 pages, Edge of Anarchy doesn't waste a chapter, moving its ensemble through multiple locations without losing momentum or emotional clarity. Readers already invested in Team Camelot will feel the weight of every decision in a way that standalone thrillers rarely achieve, while the tight pacing keeps newcomers oriented and engaged. It's the kind of series installment that deepens existing bonds rather than just extending a plot—which is exactly what keeps readers coming back for book twelve.