Once upon a time, Tom Clancy wrote some very entertaining novels, “The Hunt for Red October,” “Red Storm Rising,” and “The Cardinal of the Kremlin” among them. They were well-plotted with likable characters and filled with interesting information about whatever topic Mr. Clancy was dealing with, be it submarines, the CIA, U.S.-Soviet relations, Russian defectors, etc. I came away from those absorbing works believing I’d learned something.
But then the quality of the books declined markedly, IMHO. The plots were outlandish, the characters cardboard. The writing seemed all too militant and jingoistic—as if Mr. Clancy was pandering to his readers rather than seeking to educate and entertain.
So, it was with some trepidation that I began “Act of Defiance.” Boy, was I pleasantly surprised! Authors Brian Andrews and Jeffrey Wilson have written a tale of modern submarine warfare and geopolitical gamesmanship that finds its roots in and is, for the most part, as entertaining as “The Hunt for Red October.”
It is present day. Jack Ryan is POTUS. His daughter Katie is a wunderkind Naval Intelligence officer. The Cold War and the Soviet Union ended decades ago. But various Russian military and government higher-ups detest the kleptocracy their country has become, not to mention its loss of super-power status and subordination to the U.S. on the world stage. Those men have now gone rogue and plan to deal the US a crippling blow and reclaim Russian power and prestige. Their instrument will be Russia's newest submarine armed with experimental torpedoes as catastrophically deadly as any weapon ever made and captained by a man as bent on revenge against Jack Ryan as Ahab was against Moby Dick. Will Jack, Katie, a cast of supporting characters—some from previous “Jack Ryan” novels, others brand new—and the United States Navy be able to figure out what’s going on in time to prevent devastating damage to the U.S.?
Spanning the globe from Washington D.C., to Moscow, to the Bering Sea, to the Atlantic Ocean, and set aboard the super-carrier U.S.S. Gerald R. Ford and various U.S. and Russian submarines, “Act of Defiance” is a tense techno-thriller. It utilizes air, land, sea, and undersea operations as well as intelligence gathering and covert espionage to keep readers turning the pages to find out whether World War III will be averted. The authors seem to have done a wealth of research into the submarines of both nations and how they operate, both day-to-day and in combat.
All in all, a very good read that fans of Tom Clancy’s early works, as well as movies and novels like “Fail-Safe,” “Seven Days in May,” and “On The Beach” may well enjoy.
My thanks to NetGalley, authors Brian Andrews and Jeffrey Wilson, and publisher Penguin Group Putnam, G.P. Putnam's Sons for providing me with a complimentary ARC. The foregoing is my independent opinion.