This is the sequel to the Overton Window. The story picks up the trail of Molly Ross. She is a young patriot who exposed an undercover war for the fate of America. She has been labeled a traitor and is being hunted down. During the chase to capture her, she is blinded. Her lack of sight hinders her leadership of her small band of patriots. With out much outside support she and her group take a stand against the financial warlords attempting to control the fate of the US. This is not the best thriller I've ever read, but it was strong enough to make me read the second in the series. Glenn Beck's new thriller, "The Eye of Moloch", started off really well and remained exciting all the way through. The authors hit their stride with this one. I was OK with "The Overton Window" but this one is better.The Story: In Overton Window (as I recall) Molly Ross was leading a band called the Founder's Keepers, a group of patriots who have discovered a shadow government of individuals manipulating the system in order to replace it with something more suitable to them. "The Eye of Moloch" continues that story though the book can stand on its own. Molly is on the run and her little band of patriots have been devastated by attacks from pseudo-government security forces and the white supremacists. Now a plan emerges. She has one chance.OK. I'm not going to give away too much here but it is a pretty exciting story. I thought "The Overton Window" got too bogged down in explaining politics. Those problems have been fixed in this novel. Religious people seem real. The bad guys seem bad but not crazy, nor too wordy.This is a violent book. Bad things happen in it. It's messy but it has a purpose. I don't recall any cursing but there must have been some. I just don't recall.I liked the ending.So... not a novel for kids... unless your kids read a lot of Vince Flynn novels. :-) This novel is on par with Vince Flynn and Brad Thor kind of novels.I'd read this book again.
What do You think about The Eye Of Moloch (2013)?
Really disappointing. I believed his own hype about the book on his radio show.
—Josh