Enter a zip code
(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)
Mikhail Filitov is a war hero and Red Army Colonel, but his CIA code name is "Cardinal." A chance encounter in a Moscow subway leads the KGB to begin a hunt--for the spy in top echelons of power. From the author of Clear and Present Danger, The Hunt for Red October and Red Storm Rising, enter a world of high-wire, high-tech international intrigue that reaches from the bloody dust of Afghanistan to the use of lasers in space. The US and the USSR are negotiating a treaty that could lead to war--or peace--while their secret espionage armies are locked in the ultimate struggle. What the Cardinal knows could change the course of history. What a maverick CIA man named Ryan must do is outduel the KGB--and bring the Cardinal out alive!
The bestselling author of The Hunt for Red October, Red Storm Rising, and Patriot Games takes his readers to one of the most remarkable technological competitions of our time--the race to develop "Star Wars."
Mr. Clancy keeps his readers well abreast of current politics and psychological theories as well as the latest technology. Part of the intrigue of the novel concerns the intricacies of power struggles within the Kremlin, where a character who resembles Mikhail Gorbachev does battle with an intractable ideologue modeled on Yegor Ligachev, the Soviet leader's second in command....I look forward to each one of the volumes yet to come, not least because their appearance will testify to Jack Ryan's continuing success in averting the next world war. -- New York times
More Reviews and RecommendationsKnown for originating the techno-thriller genre, Tom Clancy writes complex novels dense with hardware and international intrigue. Perhaps the strongest indication of his power as a writer is the fact that he is often treated by the media like a character in one of his books, asked for opinions about military readiness and the subject of rumors about being debriefed by the Pentagon. Not bad for a former salesman who was rejected for service because of bad eyesight.
More About the AuthorReader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
October 19, 2006: This book is a fine example of what I like to call boys' equivalent of Harlequin novels: books packed with action and lots of technical details, but not requiring much thinking. The reader is not challenged to think why (something is about to happen), only how. Clancy's research of the technical issues of the military, its structure, the weapons, etc., seems impressive, but I admit I don't know much about those things, so it's easy to impress me with that. His knowledge of the Russian culture and language do him a lot of credit, although there too he made some faux pas (example, samogan instead of samogon, or Ukrania instead of Ukraina). However, in a spy novel, technical information is only worth the paper it's printed on if the story is good, and the story here quite honestly is weak. The good and the evil here are too clearly cut, obvious to the point of naive. The CIA is too patriotic, honest, and clean while the KGB is only as good as the guy who spies for the Americans - everyone else in KGB are plain outright evil. It's interesting that Clancy doesn't make Narmonov (a character meant to portray Gorbachev) the principal villain. Rather, it's the head of the KGB Gerasimov. Narmonov gets a mild approval from Clancy, as a statesman trying to change the USSR into a more democratic country. However, in the end, Clancy adds a dialogue between Narmonov and Ryan, where they express their respective coutry's views on the arms race. In short, Ryan says that having weapons is only justified if they protect, not attack. Narmonov says that having assault weapons is justified by the need to deter the enemy. Effectively, Clancy blames the USSR for the Cold War and the arms race, when the US had just as much to do with it. Placing Narmonov in this dialogue is especially inappropriate since Gorbachev got the Nobel Peace Prize for making the first step in the dialogue with the west and being proactive about stopping the Cold War. But perhaps I'm getting too factual, this IS a piece of fiction after all. The literary merits of this book are few and far between. Clancy's narrative is mediocre at best. The flashes of nice intrigue and action are mired by pages upon pages of technical matter that may interest only some readers. He follows all of the conventions of the genre, but then anyone could write a spy novel doing just that. His characters lack depth. Ryan is only an officer doing his job and saying all the right things, Gerasimov is pure unadulterated evil, who just wants to snatch power from Narmonov, and Filitov, who became a hero few had ever came close to becoming, and spies for the CIA. Now, here, I thought Clancy had a great chance to explore what was wrong with the Soviet system through the eyes of this character - explain why after over sixty years of believing in the Communist dream, becoming an unparalleled hero in his country this man decided to betray it. Instead, Clancy left me hanging in the air. If the answer is supposed to be 'obvious' that Soviet is bad, and American is good, that's too simplistic. I have to admit I haven't read any of his other books, well, not entirely. I started The Bear and the Dragon, but couldn't plough through more than a hundred pages. At any rate, I just wanted to make it clear that I'm revewing this book, not the author in general.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
June 22, 2000: The story starts out kinda complicated (i think only a hand full of people would probably really understand it) but the plot just gets better and better...Clancy always has a way of delivering in the end.