Book Description
Power is delightful, and absolute
power should be absolutely delightful--but not when you're the most
powerful man on earth and the place is ticking like a time bomb. Jack
Ryan, CIA warrior turned U.S. president, is the man in the hot seat,
and in this vast thriller he's up to his nostrils in crazed Asian
warlords, Russian thugs, nukes that won't stay put, and authentic,
up-to-the-nanosecond technology as complex as the characters' motives
are simple. Quick, do you know how to reprogram the software in an
Aegis missile seekerhead? Well, if you're Jack Ryan, you'd better
find someone who does, or an incoming ballistic may rain fallout on
your parade. Bad for reelection prospects. "You know, I don't
really like this job very much," Ryan complains to his aide Arnie
van Damm, who replies, "Ain't supposed to be fun, Jack."
But you bet The Bear and the Dragon is fun--over 1,000 swift pages'
worth. In the opening scene, a hand-launched RPG rocket nearly blows
up Russia's intelligence chief in his armored Mercedes, and Ryan's
clever spooks report that the guy who got the rocket in his face instead
was the hoodlum "Rasputin" Avseyenko, who used to run the
KGB's "Sparrow School" of female prostitute spies. Soon
after, two apparent assassins are found handcuffed together afloat
in St. Petersburg's Neva River, their bloated faces resembling Pokémon
toys.
The stakes go higher as the mystery deepens: oil and gold are discovered
in huge quantities in Siberia, and the evil Chinese Minister Without
Portfolio Zhang Han San gazes northward with lust. The laid-off elite
of the Soviet Army figure in the brewing troubles, as do the new generation
of Tiananmen Square dissidents, Zhang's wily, Danielle Steel-addicted
executive secretary Lian Ming, and Chester Nomuri, a hip, Internet-porn-addicted
CIA agent posing in China as a Japanese computer salesman.
He e-mails his CIA boss, Mary Pat "the Cowgirl" Foley, that
he intends to seduce Ming with Dream Angels perfume and scarlet Victoria's
Secret lingerie ordered from the catalog--strictly for God and country,
of course. Soon Ming is calling him "Master Sausage" instead
of "Comrade," but can anybody master Ming?
Naturally, the book bristles like a battlefield with intriguingly
intricate military hardware. When you've got a Tom Clancy novel in
hand, who needs action movies?
About the Author(s)
Tom
Clancy is the bestselling author of The Bear and the Dragon,
The Hunt for Red October, Red Storm Rising, Patriot Games, Clear and
Present Danger, Without Remorse, Debt of Honor and Executive Orders.
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