Pursuit of Honor cover

Pursuit of Honor

Mitch Rapp • Book 12

4.36 Goodreads
(46.9K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Six days after terrorists bomb Washington D.C., the men who stopped further bloodshed are being investigated by the government they just saved.

  • Great if you want: political betrayal layered into a hard-edged manhunt thriller
  • The experience: relentless pacing — Flynn rarely lets the tension drop
  • The writing: Flynn writes action with military precision and zero sentimentality
  • Skip if: moral ambiguity in counterterrorism tactics makes you uncomfortable

About This Book

Six days after a coordinated attack levels the National Counterterrorism Center and kills 185 people in Washington, D.C., Mitch Rapp isn't waiting for committees to convene or press conferences to be scheduled. He's hunting. But the enemies outside the government may prove easier to deal with than the ones inside it — politicians more concerned with optics than outcomes, suddenly questioning the methods of the operatives who just saved their city. Flynn captures something real here: the maddening gap between the people who make the hard calls in the dark and the ones who scrutinize those calls in the light of day.

What Flynn does exceptionally well in this installment is balance velocity with tension. The plotting moves fast, but the friction between Rapp and the political establishment gives the story genuine weight — this isn't just a chase, it's a collision of worldviews. The prose is lean and purposeful, the action sequences are choreographed with convincing detail, and the moral complexity keeps the pages turning for reasons beyond pure adrenaline. Readers who've followed Rapp across earlier books will find this one particularly satisfying in how it deepens his character without slowing the story down.

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