Books I Love to Read: Harold Coyle’s ‘Trial by Fire: A Novel’ (1992)


Sadly Out of Print: My Review of Trial by Fire: A Novel

Trial by Fire (Book 3 of the Scott Dixon series)

Author: Harold Coyle

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Publication Date (Hardcover): April 15. 1992

Genre: Military Fiction/Post-Cold War technothriller

A tank positioned on rocky terrain overlooking a long convoy of military vehicles traveling on a dusty desert road.
A military tank leads a long convoy traveling through a desert landscape.

Trial by Fire, Harold Coyle’s fourth novel—and the third to feature Lt. Col. Scott Dixon—marks a decisive shift in the author’s fictional battlefield. With the Gulf War concluded and the Warsaw Pact dissolved, Coyle turns his attention closer to home, imagining a volatile conflict that erupts not in the Middle East or Europe, but just across the Rio Grande.

Set in the early 1990s, in the uneasy aftermath of the failed Moscow coup, the novel opens with a violent and successful military uprising in Mexico. Fed up with the entrenched corruption and incompetence of the Partido Revolucionario Institucional (PRI), a cadre of senior officers topples the government and installs the Council of 13. Their motives—patriotism, frustration, and a genuine desire to modernize a nation mired in poverty—give the coup a veneer of idealism. The Council moves quickly to dismantle political opposition and confront criminal syndicates that have long operated as shadow governments in several states.

But the new regime’s ambitions collide with the ruthless will of Héctor Alaman, known as El Dueño, a powerful drug lord whose influence stretches across the Caribbean. When Col. Alfredo Guajardo orders a daring heliborne assault on Alaman’s fortified estate at Chinampas, the raid succeeds tactically but fails strategically: the compound falls, yet Alaman escapes with a cadre of seasoned mercenaries. His survival becomes the spark that threatens to ignite a much larger fire.

Alaman’s thirst for revenge is boundless. Unable to overthrow the Mexican Army outright, he instead engineers a series of border provocations designed to drag the United States into a manufactured Second Mexican–American War. It’s a bold, cynical gambit—and exactly the kind of geopolitical powder keg Coyle excels at constructing.

Into this chaos steps Lt. Col. Scott Dixon, Medal of Honor recipient and veteran of Sword Point and Bright Star. Once again, he finds himself at the tip of America’s spear. Alongside him is Capt. Hal Cerro, a former airborne officer now navigating the unfamiliar terrain of staff work within the 16th Armored Division. Coyle’s familiarity with military culture—its rhythms, frustrations, and quiet heroics—grounds their experiences in authenticity.

Coyle also revisits familiar faces. Jan Fields, the sharp, fearless journalist and Dixon’s lover, returns with her trademark blend of intelligence and stubbornness, her pursuit of the truth placing her squarely in harm’s way. Congressman Ed Lewis, a former National Guard officer, emerges as a voice demanding accountability as American troops cross into Mexico.

Trial by Fire also introduces one of Coyle’s most engaging new characters: 2nd Lt. Nancy Kozak, among the first women assigned to an infantry platoon. Coyle renders her with clarity and respect, capturing both her determination to excel in a profession long defined as a male “brotherhood of war” and the quiet resilience required to navigate that culture without surrendering her identity. Kozak’s arc becomes a showcase for Coyle’s strengths—his command of military life, his eye for human detail, and his ability to portray soldiers as complex, emotionally grounded people rather than stock figures in a technothriller.

Though Coyle’s novels operate on a smaller geopolitical canvas than those of his mentor, Tom Clancy, his characters are often more vivid, more relatable, and ultimately more compelling.