Why You'll Love This
Two women who chose each other now find that duty may be the one thing that unmakes them.
- Great if you want: romantic tension wrapped in political stakes and professional conflict
- The experience: taut and emotionally charged — the push-pull rarely lets up
- The writing: Radclyffe builds intimacy through restraint — what's unsaid hits hardest
- Skip if: you haven't read the first book — continuity matters here
About This Book
In the world of political security and personal loyalty, keeping someone safe and keeping their love are rarely the same thing. Honor Bound drops back into that tension with Cameron Roberts, a Secret Service agent who must choose between a promise made to the woman she loves and a direct order from the President of the United States. The fallout from that choice—and what it costs both women—drives a story that understands how duty can quietly become its own kind of wound.
Radclyffe writes romantic tension with precision, never letting the emotional stakes outpace the plot or vice versa. The pacing here is tight, the political backdrop feels lived-in rather than decorative, and the push-pull between Cameron and Blair carries genuine weight because the obstacles are rooted in character rather than contrivance. As the second book in the Honor series, it deepens what came before without simply repeating it—the relationships are more complicated, the threats more credible, and the moments of connection more hard-won. Readers who value romance built on real conflict will find this one earns every page.
This Book Features
Browse Related Lists
More in Honor
Above All, Honor
Book 1
190 pages
Love & Honor
Book 3
304 pages
Honor Guards
Book 4
324 pages
Honor Reclaimed
Book 5
Honor Under Siege
Book 6
320 pages
Code of Honor
Book 8
288 pages
Price of Honor
Book 9
264 pages