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Geordie Sharp #2

Zero Option by Ryan, Chris New Edition

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SAS Sergeant Geordie Sharp is required to undertake two top-secret missions, in the full knowledge that, if things go wrong, the authorities will deny all involvement. In the first mission he is to serve as a commander of a hit team on a Black, or 100 per cent non-attributable operation assigned to the SAW, the Regiment's ultra-secret Subversive Action Wing. His target is an Iraqi who defected to Libya after the Gulf War. The aim is to kill him and leave no clue to the identity or origin of the assassins. Returning to base, Sharp finds he must also carry out a high-level political assassination on mainland Britain. If he fails, his four-year-old son will die at the hands of the IRA. Trapped between opposing forces in a fight to the death, he twists and turns through a nightmare maze, desperately seeking some way of averting tragedy. Who will be hit the hardest — Geordie Sharp or the British government?

Paperback Bunko

First published January 1, 1997

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About the author

Chris Ryan

344 books1,015 followers
Colin Armstrong (b. 1961), usually known by the pen-name Chris Ryan, is a British author, television presenter, security consultant and former Special Air Service sergeant.
After the publication of fellow patrol member Andy McNab's Bravo Two Zero in 1993, Ryan published his own account of his experiences during the Bravo Two Zero mission in 1995, entitled The One That Got Away. Since retiring from the British Army Ryan has published several fiction and non-fiction books, including Strike Back, which was subsequently adapted into a television series for Sky 1, and co-created the ITV action series Ultimate Force. He has also presented or appeared in numerous television documentaries connected to the military or law enforcement.

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5 stars
435 (35%)
4 stars
455 (36%)
3 stars
273 (22%)
2 stars
55 (4%)
1 star
14 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 45 reviews
31 reviews
March 2, 2017
I've read a couple of Chris Ryan books before this one, including the first in the Geordie Sharp series. Because of this, I actually feel like I've read Zero Option before. Certain scenes are even lifted from other books from this author, with just a couple of minor alterations.

In Zero Option, Sharp's four-year-old son and pregnant girlfriend are kidnapped by the IRA and they later use this leverage to make Sharp assassinate the British Prime Minister. If you're son/daughter/pregnant wife/girlfriend got kidnapped you'd be absolutely distraught and wouldn't be able to function beyond the bare basics. However, Sharp goes on an SAS mission to the Middle East. The author explains it away by saying that Sharp's commanders wouldn't give him an option and that Sharp himself thinks it could end up being a good idea because it'll take his mind off things. It's completely unbelievable. He's so completely nonchalant, you'd think his cat had died.

I also felt no sense of desperation about him getting his family back. It could've been just any other mission. You can't really explain it by saying that that's the way Sharp is approaching it, so he keeps things professional, because you don't get that sense and surely you wouldn't be able to when it is so personal.

The book is perfectly readable, but don't expect too much believability. The star rating is simply for it's readability.
Profile Image for Graham.
1,514 reviews61 followers
December 20, 2008
The second in Chris Ryan’s Geordie Sharp series takes a little while to get started for real. There’s a ton of exposition, tying up the strands from the end of Stand By, Stand By. Lots of dialogue and an encounter with a sex-crazed female employee don’t really go anywhere – the latter element seems to have been included purely for the purpose of titillating the reader.

However, once the action moves to Libya, and the boys go in on a gung-ho adventure, riding Quad bikes across the desert, things pick up and Ryan is once more in his element. Accounts of the various operations and procedures are painstakingly detailed and really get the adrenaline pumping, with highlights including the super-rifle assassination at the end and the hit on the armoured prison van.

Ryan’s prose is chock full of expletives and machismo, which is fine for this reader, and the action scenes are expertly staged. If there are any criticisms, it’s that Ryan’s plotline is sometimes contrived, bordering on the point of ludicrous, and there are one too many coincidences in the plot for it to ring 100% true. Favourite bit? It’s gotta be the joyriders, who end up biting off more than they can chew…
Profile Image for Daniel Morgan.
1 review
April 10, 2008
One of my favourite books of all time. Carried on from the last book brilliantly. I was dissapointed with the next book in the series but I haven't finsihed the Geordie Sharp series yet so I may be a bit forthcoming with my complaints.

Definately read. Series starts with Stand by, Stand by.
Profile Image for Grace.
507 reviews11 followers
March 19, 2018
I really enjoyed this book, more so than the first one. It picked up directly where the first one left off and the conclusion was fast paced and exciting. If you like Chris Ryan then you'll like this.
Profile Image for L.M. Mountford.
Author 34 books1,267 followers
June 29, 2019
Loved it, great read very entertaining and informative. Another great book!
Profile Image for mr leslie thomason.
18 reviews
May 11, 2018
Bringing the facts of the unseen armed forces

I've given the story 5 star rating as I can relate to a story so similar, also how the story keeps on track giving a day by day coverage of how many persons are vulnerable, to anyone if certain information is available no matter how safe you think your family is. how much you would do to save your family? If you found yourself in a position were you where forced to save your family? I really enjoyed the story from start to finish Chris Ryan has researched for a good while to get all the facts necessary to bring together a captivating story.
Profile Image for Alex.
46 reviews
February 14, 2025
Was my beach book that I don’t think I read at the beach. Great size and well worn in, purchased from Q’s books in Hamilton (will be going back for another beach book). Cool story line, have described it to a few people as ‘macho guns grr’. Showcases bits of toxic masculinity within defence force culture and unsure if it was written to highlight this issue or if the author shares these values and it has just come to light in his writing (it feels more like the latter). Won’t read another one but the book has kept me company over the last week
9 reviews
September 25, 2021
Found the book unengaging. I struggled to connect to characters and their struggles or find the plot that interesting, especially with one of the main plot twists 2/3's through the book, being mentioned on the front cover. The military descriptions were good and there was the odd thing that would come up that would intrigue me enough to continue reading.

Profile Image for Azim Azidin.
2 reviews38 followers
December 17, 2016
It is great that it makes me do a bit research about Nothern Ireland relations with the UK. The IRA. PIRA. Gulf War.

It requires me to always check the dictionary to read this book as it uses British slang words.

Overall, it's interesting.
119 reviews
November 11, 2018
Barely plausible plot, more a series of vignettes than a cohesive story. What I liked best was the operational detail and ending that is more realistic than usual. Bottom line: it was worth my time and appealing enough that I will be reading at least one more book by Chris Ryan.
Profile Image for Andrew Herbert.
161 reviews3 followers
February 4, 2017
s'okay. Far fetched. The action is good, but the inconsistencies in the main character are a distraction.
Profile Image for Ben Jackson.
Author 37 books118 followers
May 17, 2017
If you're a Chris Ryan fan, then you'll love Zero Option! Chris Ryan continues to publish action packed thrillers that transport you to the scene of the battle as if you were there. Loved it!
Profile Image for Phillip.
21 reviews
February 14, 2018
Pretty much the same storyline as the first Geordie Sharp book.
Profile Image for Joanna Calder.
110 reviews12 followers
May 10, 2018
Great action, realistic dialogue but flat pacing and insufficient character development for the reader to develop a true empathy with the main character. The gung-ho will love it - things blow up.
79 reviews
November 28, 2019
Good book and detailed, as ever, but didn't have the page-turning, furious pace as I would expect from Ryan.
2 reviews
July 13, 2020
Brilliant

Excellent read thrilling from start to finish
Would recommend to all crime thriller fans not just military fiction readers !
860 reviews22 followers
August 16, 2020
Excellent read. A story about a character in the British Special Forces and the dilemmas he faces in life.
Entertaining, exciting, nail biting....everything you want in a book.
88 reviews2 followers
October 22, 2020
Zero Option

Zero Option by Chris Ryan great storyline and a great read can't wait to get around to read his next book
3 reviews
August 9, 2022
Wat a book some of it seems a bit far fetched but wat the heck its its about 5 stories in one brilliant reading reading start to finishwell worthy of 5 stars
Profile Image for James Njda.
1 review
January 31, 2020
Chris Ryan has really done a great job of starting the story with a fantastic beginning with it leaving you in the state of curiosity. Zero option is about a sas sergeant and how he struggles to regain his family from unknown enemy forces.
With unknown plots and twist I highly recommend this book to people who love drama,romance along with action and adventure
Displaying 1 - 30 of 45 reviews

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