Series: Book 8 in the Jack Ryan series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Action, Lang:en
Summary
Tom Clancy goes to the White House in this thriller of
political terror and global disaster. The American political
situation takes a disturbing turn as the President, Congress,
and Supreme Court are obliterated when a Japanese terrorist
lands a 747 on the Capitol. Meanwhile the Iranians are
unleashing an Ebola virus threat on the country. Jack Ryan,
CIA agent, is cast in the middle of this maelstrom. Because
of a recent sex scandal, Ryan was appointed vice president, a
slot he doesn't hold for long when he lands in the Chief
Executive's chair. He goes after the Iranians and then tries
to piece together the country and his life the only way he
knows how--with a fury that we've grown accustomed to in
Clancy's intricate, detailed, and accurate stories of warfare
and intrigue. Jack Ryan, Clancy's amazing upwardly mobile series hero,
must put together a government from the wreckage left at the
end of Debt of Honor (Putnam, 1994). While Jack, who assumed
the U.S. presidency after the shocking deaths of the
president and many congresspeople, attends to affairs of
state, selecting a new Cabinet and arranging for special
Congressional elections, enemies far and near continue to
create nefarious plots against the United States. Political
enemies prove themselves equally relentless, attacking the
very legitimacy of Ryan's presidential role. While Clancy is,
as always, chillingly up-to-date, he telegraphs too many
plotlines here. Worse, Ryan has become something of a whiner,
complaining at length about the miseries of living a
political life. At almost 900 pages, the book includes too
much minutiae and dwells overlong on Ryan's earlier
adventures. However, with a two-million-copy first printing,
Ryan's presence?at least for now?is assured in most public
libraries.?Elsa Pendleton, Boeing Information Services, Inc.,
Ridgecrest, Cal.
Amazon.com Review
From Library Journal
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.