Free Ebook The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy
Well, when else will certainly you discover this prospect to obtain this publication The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy soft file? This is your great opportunity to be below and get this fantastic publication The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy Never leave this publication prior to downloading this soft data of The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy in web link that we offer. The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy will truly make a large amount to be your best friend in your lonely. It will be the most effective partner to boost your company and pastime.
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy
Free Ebook The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy
The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy. Happy reading! This is what we wish to state to you who like reading a lot. Just what regarding you that declare that reading are only obligation? Never mind, checking out behavior ought to be started from some particular factors. One of them is checking out by commitment. As exactly what we want to supply right here, the publication entitled The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy is not sort of obligated publication. You could appreciate this book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy to review.
Reading habit will always lead people not to completely satisfied reading The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy, a book, ten book, hundreds publications, and much more. One that will make them really feel satisfied is finishing reading this e-book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy and also getting the message of the books, after that locating the other following book to check out. It continues increasingly more. The moment to finish reviewing a book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy will be constantly various relying on spar time to spend; one example is this The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy
Now, just how do you recognize where to get this book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy Don't bother, now you might not go to the book shop under the brilliant sun or evening to look the book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy We here constantly aid you to find hundreds type of publication. One of them is this e-book entitled The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy You could visit the web link page provided in this set and after that choose downloading. It will not take more times. Merely connect to your web accessibility as well as you could access the e-book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy on the internet. Naturally, after downloading The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy, you may not publish it.
You could conserve the soft file of this e-book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy It will certainly rely on your extra time as well as tasks to open and also review this book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy soft documents. So, you could not be worried to bring this book The Sum Of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), By Tom Clancy almost everywhere you go. Simply include this sot data to your kitchen appliance or computer disk to permit you check out every time and also almost everywhere you have time.
A major motion picture starring Ben Affleck, Morgan Freeman, James Cromwell, Alan Bates and Michael Byrne!
Peace may finally be at hand in the Middle East—as Deputy Director of the CIA Jack Ryan lays the groundwork for a peace plan that could end centuries of conflict. But ruthless terrorists have a final, desperate card to play: they have their hands on a nuclear weapon and have placed it 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. With one terrible act, distrust mounts, forces collide, and the floundering U.S. president seems unable to cope with the crisis. With the world on the verge of nuclear disaster, Ryan must frantically seek a solution—before the chiefs of state lose control of themselves and the world.
- Movie release: May 31, 2002
- Studio: Paramount
- Director: Phil Alden Robinson (Sneakers, Field of Dreams)
- Producer: Mace Neufeld (Hunt For Red October, Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger)
- Sales Rank: #82573 in Books
- Brand: Berkley
- Published on: 2002-05-07
- Released on: 2002-05-07
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 6.75" h x 1.50" w x 4.20" l, 1.00 pounds
- Binding: Mass Market Paperback
- 914 pages
- Great product!
Amazon.com Review
Once again, Tom Clancy manages to add new twists to the alternate U.S. history he initiated in The Hunt for Red October. 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
From Publishers Weekly
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.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews
The master of the techno-thriller places nuclear-weapon technology in the hands of Third World terrorists and sets the superpowers on the path to Armageddon just when everybody thought it was safe to relax. Clancy dishes out page after page of highly detailed atomic bomb assembly directions and nuclear submarine specifications, enough technodazzle to satisfy the most seriously committed technofreak, but it is plain old-fashioned plotting in the best, hair-raising, we're-all-going-to-die-in-five-seconds-if-somebody- doesn't-do-something tradition that keeps things cracking in the very eventful life of Jack Ryan, hijacker of submarines, friend of princes, wizard of Wall Street, true spirit of the CIA, and devoted father. This time Ryan's nemeses are Arab terrorists who stumble on a lost Israeli atom bomb and get big ideas; the cowardly but attractive National Security Director who shares the President's pillow and hates our Jack; and the bottle. It is the last of these plagues that most worries Ryan's pretty ophthalmologist wife and friends. Stressed out by his responsibilities at Langley, unwinding every night with wine-in-a-box, he's gotten paunchy and cranky and unable to fulfill his husbandly role, and he's become vulnerable to the machinations of his archenemy Liz Elliot, the widowered President's favorite advisor. A boozy, discredited Jack Ryan means that the US is in deep danger when the Arabs hire an East German physicist to upgrade their beat-up but still lethal old bomb before placing it outside the Super Bowl game in Denver. With Ryan out of favor there's no one to counter Ms. Elliot's misinformed ravings. The pesky terrorists and their truculent Native American recruit intend the atomic explosion to stir things up between the Americans and the supposedly defanged Soviets--and they get their wish. Ignoring Jack Ryan, listening to Liz Elliot, everybody in Washington panics, the Soviets get their backs up, bombers launch, submarines crank up their missiles, and thanks to more terrorist meddling, tanks from both sides start blowing each other up in Berlin. Has Jack knocked off the sauce in time to save the world? Clancy swears he has left the critical parts out of the atom bomb directions, and we will all just have to pray that he has. They sure seem complete, though. This is quite a rouser. (Book-of- the-Month Main Selection for August.) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Most helpful customer reviews
29 of 30 people found the following review helpful.
Remarkable Fiction
By Rob C.
As we again face turmoil in the Middle East, this book becomes more timely than ever. The story of a nuclear warhead falling into the hands of very determined terrorists, it winds throughout the world, through characters that come to life, and terror and suspense that will surely amaze and satisfy the reader.
Almost too true to life to be a work of fiction, this book is more technical and heavily written than earlier Clancy works, but the high degree of detail and heart-stopping tension more than balances the scientific complexities in the narrative.
At times the characters a carbon copies of earlier Clancy protagonists but the brilliant use of them makes up for some of their predictability.
Ryan and crew are back with a vengance and the safety of the world are in the balance. A must read and a well and worthy effort. Not perfect, but by far, one of the finest nuclear terror novels ever written.
And keep in mind, it could all happen as soon as today.
35 of 40 people found the following review helpful.
Someone should make a movie based on this book
By Mark
Yes, I know, there is a movie called "The Sum of All Fears," but whatever it was based on, it wasn't this book. Now they even have two characters from the movie on the cover of the book, but that's misleading, because those characters don't exist in the book. One is a young rookie CIA operative named Jack Ryan; the other is his mentor, Morgan Freeman - well, he has another name in the movie, but it's the same character Freeman always plays, the all-wise, all-knowing elder statesman with no character flaws and never a lapse in judgment.
The book's main character is also named Jack Ryan, but he is a veteran analyst who has worked his way up to number two in the CIA. The top guy, who happens to have the same name as the Morgan Freeman character in the movie, is a stuffed shirt who is content to bask in the perks of his position and let Ryan run the agency, and is little more than a bit player in the book. The centerpiece of both book and movie is the bad guys setting off a nuke at the Super Bowl. But the events leading up to and following the nuclear detonation are what make the book the riveting thriller that it is, and none of that found its way into the movie.
In the book, Ryan has managed to get on the bad side of the president's girlfriend/National Security Advisor. That doesn't really figure significantly in the action until after the bomb, but along the way, in a comic-relief scene I find myself pulling the book off the shelf and rereading repeatedly over the years, we get to see the mysterious and sinister Mr. Clark morph into a marriage counselor and save the Ryans' marriage. I'd love to see a movie depiction of Clark and Chavez escorting Cathy Ryan through a bad neighborhood to a restaurant ("We can't go out, the neighborhood isn't..." "Um, safe, ma'am?") and Clark laying out the facts for her as only Clark can, but it's not to be.
Meanwhile we watch as Arab/Muslim terrorists develop a nuke from a leftover Israeli bomb from 1973 and deploy it in the U.S. Clancy was way ahead of his time: Ten years before 9/11, he depicted Muslim zealots attaching the U.S. on our soil. After 9/11, it would make a gripping and socially relevant movie. But nobody made that movie. Instead, we get a movie where the bad guys are European right-wing extemists. I guess that post-9/11 Hollywood has decided that the real danger to the U.S. lies not with Muslim zealotry but right-wing extremism. It's a shame, because Clancy provides a balanced treatment of both the sinister and positive sides in middle eastern Islam. Most of the Muslims in the book, from the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia down to the old farmer who finds the Israeli bomb in his yard, are noble and peace-loving, and even the terrorists are presented not as cold-hearted automatons or wild-eyed fanatics but as caring and principled men with a misguided sense of religious duty. But I guess that's not good enough for Hollywood; we can't present the slightest hint of negativity in a Muslim character.
After the bomb goes off is when the book really kicks into gear and becomes a can't-put-down page-turner. Most of this has to do with Ryan's efforts to stop the president and his girlfriend/NSA from overreacting and kicking off mutually assured destruction with the Soviets, and Ryan draws on his wits, his experience, his extensive knowledge of our government and military operations, and his personal relationship with a thinly disguised Gorbachev to stop the countdown at the last moment. I don't even remember what Boy Ryan is up to at that stage of the movie, but by that point it's not even the same story.
My only complaint about the book is that it's too long, with too many subplots woven in. For example, near the end, a U.S. submarine gets a huge log caught in its propeller. That in itself is crucial to the plot. But to get to that point, we have interspersed through the book the cutting down of the tree, the discussion of what it will be used for, the cutting of the tree into logs, the trucking of the logs to a seaport, their loading onto a ship, the approaching storm at sea, and finally the logs getting washed overboard. But it's not enough to lose the reader's interest.
28 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
The career high point of Clancy's Jack Ryan character
By A Customer
Believe me, the earlier ones lead up to this ("The Hunt For Red October", "Patriot Games", "Cardinal Of the Kremlin" and "Clear and Present Danger"), and the last two ("Debt Of Honor" and "Executive Orders") are downhill. Through the earlier books, Ryan was developing from an obscure CIA academic into the hero we know. After this, he falls into the Presidency and becomes the target of political enemies. But "Sum Of All Fears" is where he's at his best. He prevails against terrorists led by a leader who's dying of cancer and has nothing to lose. With the help of his beautiful brilliant physician wife (though conservative, Clancy seems determined to avoid sexism), he prevails against a Murphy Brown clone in the Cabinet who tries to torpedo both his career and his family life. Maybe it's a bit overblown when he also saves the world from an escalating nuclear crisis and a panicky president because he's personal friends with a Kremlin higher-up, but hell, he prevails there too. If you like Jack Ryan as a Yankee James Bond who uses his mind a lot and a gun hardly ever, read this book, then press .
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy PDF
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy EPub
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy Doc
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy iBooks
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy rtf
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy Mobipocket
The Sum of All Fears (A Jack Ryan Novel), by Tom Clancy Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar