Paul Humphreys rambles on....
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20041004 Monday October 04, 2004

Tom Clancy's books

I was hoping to find a decent web page for him but could not do so. His books are monsters, some greater than four hundred pages long. I have read most and have my own favourites. Some of his characters you will know are Jack Ryan who becomes the US president, Ramius the Russian submarine commander who decides to jump ship to the US and John Clark the secretive CIA man who has his past history revealed in Without Remorse.

I am reading the current book and it is quite good. The Teeth of the Tiger has Ryan's son in an organisation created by his father before he retires. The great comment in the book is "If you want to kick a tiger in the ass, you'd better have a plan for dealing with his teeth".

Of course the famous books for most must be " The Hunt for Red October where Ryan and the US navy try to find the Russian commander who may be trying to defect with his submarine and its secret drive system. Sean Connery keeps his Scottish accent despite his position as the boat's Russian commander.. Patriot Games has Harrison Ford pitched against Sean Bean, an IRA killer.

Rainbow Six, Sum of all Fears and Clear and Present Danger are also good yarns but I think the Bear and the Dragon where China invades Russia is Clancy back at his best. Less good stories are Red Rabbit, Executive Orders, Red Storm Rising and Cardinal of the Kremlin.

I think what is most impressive is his attention to detail and the efforts he goes to make his story accurate from a technical point of view.

The best I leave for last - the story Clancy was asked to write is about John Clarke's origins. Without Remorse is the only Clancy I have read twice and may do so again.

( Oct 04 2004, 12:00:00 PM PDT ) Permalink Comments [3]

Comments:

Perhaps because it was my first Clancy novel, but I disagree regarding Red Storm Rising. That was the Clancy book I read multiple times. Of course, I had much more time to do so back then...

Posted by Kevin Jordan on October 04, 2004 at 01:46 PM PDT #

His books are monsters, some greater than four hundred pages long.

If 400 pages is intimidating, I recommend you steer clear of Stephen King and J. R. R. Tolkien! Having just read all seven volumes of King's Dark Tower series (all between 400 and 800 pages), I have to say that I enjoy immersing myself in a world of such depth and complexity. A mere 400 pages would feel like a light snack between meals....

Posted by Geoff Arnold on October 04, 2004 at 03:41 PM PDT #

I liked Clancy's non-fiction "Submarine", exhaustive detail about the US "Silent Service". Marvelous.

Posted by Calum Mackay on October 04, 2004 at 04:58 PM PDT #

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