Why You'll Love This
When the terrorist's daughter and the president's daughter are on a collision course, the line between loyalty and betrayal cuts closer to home than either woman expects.
- Great if you want: political suspense woven tightly with sapphic romance and moral complexity
- The experience: taut and fast-moving — short chapters keep the tension ratcheting up
- The writing: Radclyffe balances action and emotional interiority with practiced efficiency
- Skip if: you haven't read earlier Honor books — context matters here
About This Book
When the people sworn to protect you might be the ones you should fear most, the line between patriot and traitor becomes impossible to find. In Price of Honor, Radclyffe drops Blair Powell and her security chief Cameron Roberts into a domestic threat that cuts uncomfortably close — a conspiracy reaching into the president's own inner circle, with Blair's life and her father's presidency hanging in the balance. This is a story about the cost of loyalty when loyalty itself has been weaponized, and about two women who must trust each other completely in a world designed to make trust dangerous.
Radclyffe writes political suspense with the same precision she brings to her characters' emotional lives — the tension is structural, built into every scene rather than sprinkled on top. Nine books into the Honor series, the relationships carry real weight, and returning readers will find that history paying off in quietly devastating ways. New readers won't feel lost; Radclyffe grounds the stakes cleanly without stalling the momentum. The prose is lean and purposeful, and the pacing rarely lets you look away.
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