Executive Orders (Jack Ryan) | Tom Clancy | Excellent read!
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Executive Orders (...
Executive Orders (Jack Ryan)
Tom Clancy
Berkley
, 1997 - 1376 pages
average customer review:
based on 505 reviews
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highly recommended
Jack
Ryan
has become President of the United States-and finds himself surrounded by enemies both inside the White House and around the world.
Fast Paced and Thrilling
If you are a fan of Tom Clancy you will love this book. It has all the aspects a book require to make it a great read. Twist after twist this book will keep you on the edge of your seat until the very last page. The events in this book are so realistic you might as well be reading a non-fiction book, that's part of what makes this book so good. If haven't read the books leading up to this I would definitely recommend that you read the other
jack
Ryan
books first. You will fall in love with Jack Ryan in this book and all of Tom Clancy's other books.
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Excellent read!
This is also one of Tom Clancy's better books, it follows on the heals of Debt of Honor. I think that Debt of Honor and
Executive
Order should be read back to back. As the ending of Debt of Honor is continued into Executive Order.
The plot is a very plausible one, since the invasion of Iraq and the execution of Saddam. The fear that Iran could enter into Iraq and unite it with their own country, due to the large Shia population within Iraq. Tom Clancy shows once again his foresight into a possible scenario.
The other interesting co-incidence is the lawsuit against
Ryan
as President of the United States, which to a degree reflected the 2000 election, this book was published in 1998, and the execution of Saddam and war in the middle east. In some ways
Jack
Ryan was a foreshadow of GWB and the events that would surround his presidency.
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The Pinnacle of the Jack Ryan Universe
"
Executive
Orders
" is 1358 pages long. Yes, you read that correctly 1358 pages long! No one has ever praised Tom Clancy for the brevity of his prose, but 1358 pages is one audaciously long book. The only thing that could keep reading a novel of this length from being an overwhelmingly tiresome exercise is for it to contain an audaciously good story. Fortunately for Tom Clancy and
Jack
Ryan
fans, this book resoundingly succeeds on this count.
Now, please be forewarned [IF YOU HAVE NOT READ "DEBT OF HONOR" YET, THEN GO NO FURTHER WITH THIS REVIEW]:
Now, if you have read "Debt of Honor", you will remember the absolutely shocking way it ended, with a rogue Japanese commercial airline pilot crashing his 747 into the Capitol Dome during the President's speech to a joint session of Congress, killing all of Congress, the President, the Cabinet, and the Supreme Court justices (among others). This all happened after the sitting Vice President has resigned in disgrace and Jack Ryan was just approved to be the new VP by acclimation vote of Congress before the plane struck.
So, now Jack is President and he has rebuild a devastated government while facing a political threat from the former VP who thinks he should be president; a foreign crisis brought about by Middle East upheavals (one of which is proving to be quite prophetic); and a domestic crisis brought about by a biological terrorist attack. It's just another day in the life of Jack Ryan.
The real appeal of this book is that every different plot thread is extraordinarily well thought out and set up. In most books this ambitious, you will find certain plot lines boring, making you anxious to get to more exciting portions of the story. In "Executive Orders", Clancy never falls into that trap. You can feel each different thread building upon the others, instead of running in opposition to them. The payoff is a tremendous climax (or rather a series of them) which rewards the reader for their efforts throughout this magnum opus.
"Executive Orders" is a crowning achievement in the Jack Ryan Universe. There are so many fabulous books in the Ryan series, but this one is its apex.
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Plotlines review
Let rate each of the major plotlines in the book in true U.S. Navy fashion, of Outstanding, Excellent, Good, Satisfactory or Unsatisfactory. SPOILER ALERT -- spoilers abound.
The Asia Minor war with the United Islamic Republic. First off, I must note that
Jack
Ryan
is not a good president. His unpresidential conduct (e.g., maudlin funeral service) made him, and by extension his country, look weak. Something to think about when we elect the next president. Second, we now know that Iran taking over Iraq in a matter of days is not something that could happen. Iran can barely control itself, let alone another country. The land, air and sea battles were fairly well done, however. Rating: good.
Ebola terrorism. Well done with the exception that Ding and Chavez pop up, Zelig-like, to provide crucial information about who has been experimenting with monkeys. The retribution at the end was fantastic (JDAMs on the mullah-in-chief's house especially), and my only question is, Why not use a high-level nuclear bomb to destroy the lab, instead of a low-level one? Rating: excellent.
The assassination attempt on Jack. The idea of a Mohammedan sleeper agent is certainly plausible, post- 9-11, post-Lackawanna Sleeper Cell. I didn't like the fact that catching the rogue Secret Service agent depended in part on luck, but it was certainly presented in a plausible way. Rating: excellent.
The assassination attempt on SANDBOX. I'm getting tired of "kids in jep." Clancy skillfully played that card in "Patriot Games" but I'm a little annoyed to see it come up again here. The only thing that saves this plotline from Unsatisfactory rating is the vivid description of the assault and the takedown of the bad guys. Rating: satisfactory.
The Mountain Men. Didn't go anywhere and was unnecessary. Unsatisfactory.
Edward Kealty tries to muscle back into the presidency. A little absurd but does present interesting legal issues. Rating: good.
Running the government. Clancy obviously took the chance to tell us everything he would change if he were president, but it wound up being just a series of political speeches that any competent editor could have stopped. Two hundred or more pages could have been taken out of the book in this part alone and it would have been far better. Clancy needs an editor with some backbone, for his sake as well as ours. Rating: unsatisfactory.
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