Hunting Ground

Reviewed By  Janet Mawdesley       April 15, 2026

 

Author  Andrew Warren

Distributor:      Amazon
ISBN:                 978-1837039074
Publisher:         Boldwood Books
Release Date:   15 April 2025  

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Once you move past the very graphic violence in the first chapter of Hunting Ground from Andrew Warren accepting that this is the norm, there is an excellent story of a white supremist cult obsession, power and tragedy to be discovered.

Thomas Caine is recovering from a Mission that saw him decide that he had been lucky probably for the last time and he needed to reassess his future, particularly where it involved Rebecca Freeling, a woman who somehow saw the best in him.

But his freshly created plans are put to the ultimate test when a protest march turns violent, and at the same time a terrorist attack occurs on the G. H.  Fallon Building in Baltimore; the building where his beloved Rebecca works.

This is followed by a series of tragic circumstances, the death of his friend Tom’s son Sean, a person he had vowed to protect, and the discovery that his long-time mentor and friend Frank Balwin was dead.

Tom is deeply challenged by the events that have occurred. When he makes the decision to risk everything for an answer he finds he is once again having to dig deep, far deeper than ever before as he is facing something so destructive it could see America facing a civil war.

Working clandestinely alongside AJ Zavala, an FBI Special Agent who becomes accidently involve, having unexpectedly inherited the property of Frank Baldwin, along with a series of cryptic letters, they realise that whatever is occurring in the San Bernadino Mountains it nothing but bad with tentacles that reach into the highest levels of Government.

Has he risked all for a lost cause or can they seek out the ruthless killers and see them bought to justice.  Will Rebecca forgive him this time or not is also on his mind as he and AJ face incredible odds against well trained men, in a battle that could see them both dead.

Fast paced, vivid in description and a cliff hanger right to the end, Andrew Warren leaves the future of Thomas Caine hanging by a thread as he makes the toughest decision of his very challenging career.