Series: Book 5 in the Jack Ryan series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Action, Lang:en
Summary
Once again, Tom Clancy manages to add new twists to the
alternate U.S. history he initiated in __. In
The Sum of All Fears, the center of conflict is the
perpetual hot spot the Mideast, where a nuclear weapon falls
into the hands of terrorists just as peace seems possible.
Clancy realistically paints an almost unthinkable
scenario--the bomb is planted on American soil in the midst
of an escalation in tension with the Soviet Union; the
terrorists hope to rekindle cold war animosity and prevent
reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians. Despite such a dramatic story line, Clancy doesn't neglect
the individuals who drive his tale. Jack Ryan's problems are
as much domestic as they are part of the international crisis
that is the ostensible narrative: National Security Director
Elizabeth Elliot has the president's ear, and she has
convinced him that Ryan's ethics are questionable. She hints
at marital infidelity and an insider-trading scandal. Of
course, both accusations are false, but her arguments have
enough evidence behind them (e.g. some photographs of an
innocent embrace with a friend) to cause a strain in the
Ryans' marriage and a flurry of media attention. While "Mr.
Clark" tracks the terrorists, he also provides some needed
intelligence to heal the Ryan family.
The Sum of All Fears is the stuff of nightmares but
contains enough verisimilitude to terrify sober minds. Ryan
has matured into a complex protagonist as Clancy's writing,
too, has matured. Ryan is plagued by stress and self-doubts
that test even his dauntless moral compass and make him a
more interesting subject for readers' attention. Those
fascinated by military hardware, from nuclear submarines to
atomic weapons, will find almost enough here to start their
own army. And Clancy's understanding of international
politics seems chillingly correct.
--Patrick O'Kelley
Clancy evolves from storyteller to novelist in his latest
techno-thriller, as gadgets take second place to politics and
personalities. In the late 1990s the world is cautiously
emerging from the Cold War; even the Arab-Israeli conflict is
being resolved, thanks to the cleverness of Clancy's hero
Jack Ryan. But as confrontation yields to cooperation, what
becomes of displaced terrorists? Palestinians without a cause
and East Germans without a country seek to rekindle
U.S.-U.S.S.R. animosity. A small nuclear device is exploded
at the Super Bowl; in Berlin American and Russian troops are
tricked into firing on each other; residual suspicions carry
the action from there. After the solution of the Middle East
crisis serves as an exciting preliminary to the main plot,
the novel's middle parts seem a recycling of situations and
characters from Red October and Cardinal of the Kremlin. But
in the last third of the book Clancy integrates story lines,
taking readers on a nonstop roller-coaster ride to a
nail-biting finish. Fundamentally, Clancy is writing about a
vital and elusive quality: grace under pressure. Whether
terrorists or statesmen, Clancy's characters face a common
challenge--situations that break down pretensions of rank,
power and ideology. Their responses, carefully and
empathetically constructed, make this book compelling instead
of merely ingenious.
Amazon.com Review
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.