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Red Tide

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A gripping military thriller of naval warfare and geopolitical suspense, where a Navy rear admiral must defy impossible odds to stop a Pacific conflict over advanced semiconductor chips from igniting World War III, perfect for fans of Jack Carr and Tom Clancy.

A rising superpower. A world on the brink. One admiral with everything to lose.

The US Navy is pushed to its limits as China’s growing fleet casts a long shadow over the Pacific. Both nations are locked in a deadly race for control of Taiwan’s advanced semiconductor technology, the key to global dominance. The stakes are nothing short of war.

Rear Adm. Will Cole thought his battles were over. With decades of hard-fought service behind him, he was ready to hand over the reins to the next generation of “fighting Coles.” His children are primed to carry on the fight in their own ways, from the cockpit of an F-18 to the merchant ships that fuel the economy. But when simmering tensions explode into an all-out conflict, Will is thrust back into action. His orders? Destroy the Chinese fleet and retake Taiwan at any cost.

The mission is as unthinkable as it is impossible—for failure means losing everything he holds dear. Will must lead his team against insurmountable odds to win the ultimate battle for freedom, risking his family and his legacy in the fight of a lifetime.

For fans of gripping military thrillers and heart-pounding action, Red Tide blends high-stakes geopolitical intrigue with the unbreakable bonds of family loyalty.

Audible Audio

Published September 23, 2025

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About the author

M.P. Woodward

11 books250 followers
Michael Patrick Woodward is the New York Times bestselling author of nine thriller novels, including four set within the Tom Clancy Jack Ryan universe. A former U.S. Navy intelligence officer, Woodward conducted operational and strategic analysis in the Middle East and Pacific theaters. His next novel, The Fourth Option (co‑authored with Jack Carr), releases this May, followed by The Coldest War, a Tom Clancy Jack Ryan Sr. thriller, in the fall. He lives in the Pacific Northwest.

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5 stars
567 (64%)
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229 (25%)
3 stars
64 (7%)
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10 (1%)
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews
Profile Image for Henry.
904 reviews78 followers
October 27, 2025
Very good novel. A compelling read. The only reason I gave it four stars instead of five is it length. Hate to say it it's too short! The author spends the first 100 pages or so introducing the characters, but then the real action is too condensed with key events not even described but simply stated as having occurred. It has been described as similar to Red Storm Rising, but is not comparable to that early Tom Clancy novel.
Profile Image for Todd.
2,280 reviews8 followers
February 15, 2026
A thrilling book of naval battles and intrigue. When 10 of the 11 aircraft carriers in the US Pacific fleet are in drydock for various repairs China takes the opportunity to strike.

A well written military thriller from start to finish is a standalone.
Profile Image for Kent Bunn.
17 reviews1 follower
October 29, 2025
It should have easily been a 5* read.

Overall the story is great. But about halfway in, the author introduces tech that is pivotal to the resolution of the story. And unfortunately that tech is just complete fantasy land bullshit that took me completely out of the story when it hit.

Also, the third act of the book was VERY rushed compared to the slow burn buildup. I'd have been totally fine with the story being stretched out to a second or even a third book if that's what it took, but instead we got a lightning fast resolution, it felt like. And then a quick afterward set a year later.

There was a ton of promise here, and it just fell short.
1 review1 follower
October 28, 2025
Slow and boring.

Basically a soap opera with with a Tom Clancy spin. Maybe Herman W. Winds of war kind of thing. Wanted like it, but not.
Profile Image for Ethan.
13 reviews
November 27, 2025
We’ve reached genuine critical mass when it comes to “modern techno thrillers in the form of Red Storm Rising”. The fact that the Naval Institute Press published this novel astounds me. The least of the issues with this book is the complete and utter lack of coherent dialogue. It’s just not how real people talk. The real issues come from its utter divorce from an understanding of doctrine or the technical capabilities the author claims to have researched. Within visual range dogfights, contested amphibious landings, and the mere brushing away of cyber and space effects as a minor inconvenience within a contested multidomain environment are the smallest issues. This author’s understanding of unit capabilities and doctrine in the United States is 80s-vintage at best. I can forgive some discrepancies on research of the People’s Liberation Army, but I cannot forgive such errors on basic understanding of U.S. capabilities in a novel that claims to be a “novel of the next Pacific War”. Utter garbage.

The author simply does not know ball.
Profile Image for Jim Pomeroy.
67 reviews
February 12, 2026
This was a very fun and entertaining read. The dialogue at times is indeed corny and awkward (in terms of over-contextualizing for the reader) but the way in which Woodward plays out a confrontation over Taiwan is brilliant. I just wish that the book had more characters from the coalition partners. An Australian or two would’ve been fun. Also, where is the ROC military character here?

A chief complaint I’ve seen from some reviewers is that Woodward’s politics bleed through a bit. Fair, but what did you expect (I wasn’t a fan of the water boarding joke lol)? That’s like reading a Judy Blume book and complaining that it focuses on women too much.
278 reviews6 followers
September 19, 2025
It's been a long time since I've read a book that reminded me so much of the early Tom Clancy Jack Ryan books. This book had the technical details that Clancy was famous for, along with all the action/drama you would expect. I also enjoyed the inner dialogue with Will, as you could see him trying to always have the proper response in every situation. At first, I was concerned that the gaps in time where we "missed" things happening would be an issue, but those gaps all got filled in after the fact with the details we really needed - so we didn't waste any time reading extraneous detail. Overall, great story and HIGHLY recommend.
Profile Image for Chris.
2,144 reviews29 followers
October 21, 2025
Not as fast paced as some military techno thrillers but it still delivers- especially the final quarter. I thought the private lives of the characters melodramatic and not necessary. My gut was wrong on the fates of pretty much everyone.
Profile Image for Carl Smith.
94 reviews2 followers
February 3, 2026
Well written action story about a future US/China naval confrontation that was way too accurate to be comfortable. J. P. Did a great job of weaving personalities and plots together. I’ve read many of his books, all great, but this one is exceptional. Highly recommend.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
3 reviews1 follower
September 24, 2025
Fantadtic Novel

I greatly enjoy this fantsdtic book. While I enjoy his writing in the Tom Clancy universe it’s a shame it limits his own novels.
2 reviews
November 15, 2025
Average story,not very believable and inaccurate in many areas. The distances in battles are a joke ( i can not believe that modern aircraft carriers are 200 miles apart and stay hidden! ) and how come an invasion in taiwanese soil comes with no answer from the armed forces of the country? Not a great story.
578 reviews11 followers
March 12, 2026
This is one of those books that sat on my TBR pile since it came out and was always one of those books that fell into the category of "Damn, I keep meaning to get to it (and then another great book comes along). Finally, after about six months (the book was released on 16 September 2025), I had the opportunity to read this book.

The novel establishes, I think, two motives for the story:

First, the novel depicts a near-future scenario where the U.S. Navy is stretched thin while China's combat fleet continues to expand. The core of the geopolitical tension is the race for control over advanced semiconductor technology produced in Taiwan, which is essential for global economic and military dominance. When Chinese forces strike first, they capture key AI chip factories and inflict heavy losses on American assets, threatening to ignite a third World War.

Second, China’s quest to reunify with Taiwan. China seeks to control Taiwan primarily to fulfill its goal of "national rejuvenation" and complete reunification, viewing the self-governed island as a breakaway province and a core interest. Driven by President Xi Jinping's 2049 deadline, Beijing aims to eliminate Taiwan's sovereignty, secure its eastern seaboard, and challenge U.S. influence in the Pacific.

The CCP government justifies the Taiwan thing completely from a historical perspective as China seeks to reunify with Taiwan (as Beijing considers Taiwan an inalienable part of its territory - unfinished business from the 1949 Chinese Civil War) as this would allow the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) to project power directly into the Pacific Ocean, breaking through the "first island chain" that currently limits its naval expansion.

As China occupies the island "nation" of Taiwan, it captures an AI chip factory, which gives them control of most of the world’s chip supply.

Later, Chinese missiles even sink an Australian merchant marine ship near the Solomon Islands. ________________________________
Characters in the book

The story is largely told through the eyes of the "Fighting Coles," a naval family deeply embedded in the conflict:

The Cole Family

Rear Admiral Will Cole: The outgoing operations officer (N3) of the Pacific Fleet, who is ordered to do the "impossible"—destroy the Chinese fleet and retake Taiwan before it is too late.

Henry Cole: The eldest son and a Navy lieutenant who flies F-18 Hornets.

Jamie Cole: The middle son, serving as a merchant marine officer.

Lucy Cole: The daughter, who works for a defense contractor and plays a critical role alongside venture capitalist Gabe Sorkin to bypass bureaucratic hurdles and innovate military tech.

Key Plot Points

Bureaucratic Battle: Before the missiles fly, Cole is sent stateside to warn a hardened political establishment that is not taking the Pacific threat seriously.

Submarine Warfare: The narrative features intense underwater action, including the submarine Missouri, which must recover after being grounded in undersea mud during the initial Chinese attack.

Rescue Operations: A major subplot involves Marines attempting to rescue Sam Chang, the elderly CEO of the world’s largest semiconductor company, whose expertise is indispensable to U.S. technology.

Naval Actions: The book concludes with a final fleet amphibious action where Cole risks his family’s legacy and his career to preserve maritime freedom.
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This is a war that is nasty, brutish, and short as the Chinese offensive takes out important U.S. resources in the region, including fighter jets, a dozen B-2 bombers, and proud vessels like the aircraft carrier Stennis, which sinks near the Marianas Trench, the deepest part of the ocean.

At first, the Americans suffer horrific losses (a part of the novel that was barely explained - one of the contributing factors to the grade that I am giving this novel), and Chinese leaders believe they have won an easy victory. So, the U.S. Navy must find a way to drive out the enemy without triggering World War III. The Marines have a specific goal to rescue Sam Chang, the 79-year-old chief executive of the world’s largest semiconductor fabrication company. He is indispensable to the U.S. tech industry, and he may be on his deathbed. People around him, including his son, do not have his interests at heart, and they will gladly turn everything over to the People’s Republic of China.

I found this to be a very good novel, with the only real drawback being that for a novel with a subject matter of this magnitude that I found certain events to be glazed over (with only a brief mention). The real action (at the end of the book) seemed to have been condensed with the major influencing events that one would think led to the action at the end of the book were merely stated (such as the decimation of the US Pacific Fleet and the sinking of the USS Stennis).

One of the issues that I noticed that kind of threw me for a loop was the throughout the majority of the book, the PLANAF (China's People's Liberation Army Naval Air Force) was flying the J-15 "Flying Shark", In the latter chapters of the book, the PLAAF was flying the "Flanker" (which is the NATO reporting name for the Sukhoi Su-27 - which is a Soviet-designed, twin-engine, supersonic, super-maneuverable air superiority fighter designed to counter US fighters like the F-15 Eagle).
________________________________
Upon a quick Google search, it turns out that the Shenyang J-15 "Flying Shark" is deeply related to the Sukhoi Su-27 family, though it is not a direct copy of the base Su-27. The two aircraft are both part of the Sukhoi "Flanker" family, sharing similar aerodynamic layouts, including large, twin-engine, twin-tail, and mid-wing configurations. However, the J-15 is a carrier-based multi-role fighter which includes carrier-specific enhancements that the SU-27 does not have (including folding wings, reinforced landing gear, and an arrestor hook). The J-15 is actually derived from the j-11B (which is operated by the PLAAF)

Furthermore, the J-15 is designed specifically as a carrier-based multirole fighter to operate from the Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy's (PLAN) aircraft carriers, including the Liaoning, Shandong, and Fujian (which was the name of the main Chinese carrier in the novel).
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Other than a few discrepancies, Woodward does an excellent job capturing the possibilities of the future and the needs of today’s Navy as we contemplate the evolving threat environment in the West Pacific.

Now for my vaunted "five cents" review, there were a few issues that I had with this book (which is resulting in a slightly lower grade) but overall, I would give this book a solid four stars and believe that this particular novel would be worthy of any military aficionado. When I look at authors with a similar writing style to Woodward, it would seem that his name is mentioned in the same breath as Brad Thor, James A. Bultema, Brian Freeman, and James Rosone - which is a rarefied company to keep.

As with all my literary comments, this is just my five cents' worth.
Profile Image for Neil.
1,350 reviews14 followers
November 30, 2025
Either 3 or 4 stars. I'll figure it out at the end.

It was an interesting story. It starts out with a prologue, then jumps back in time 30 days and proceeds forward to catch back up with "the present." Because of this, it felt like it both took a bit of time to build up while moving forward at a decent pace.

The character development is so-so; I did not find myself caring much for the core group of "main characters."





There were some weak moments in the book, no lie.

I feel like it is a 3.5 stars. I felt like it wanted to be a worthy contender of sitting next to Red Storm Rising if Clancy's book had taken place in the Pacific instead of in Europe. I don't know that it reached "those lofty heights", however. It has solid moments in it, however, that had me almost sitting on the edge of my seat. I think, though, the book could have been longer or the story told in maybe two books to flesh it out better as the narrative takes a long time to slowly build up to "the turning point" and then the story "is over" (with a jump to "a year later" and all that such a jump entails in order to neatly wrap things up). I kind of felt cheated with the ending, actually, because of the "tension" that actually did build up within me due to the slow burn of the narrative, and at the end, I was, "That's IT?!?", hahahah! I think that sense of feeling cheated knocks it down to 3 stars for me; otherwise, it would have been four stars (3.5 rounded down). The book has a killer image on the cover, however - no lie that that cover caught my eye and made me want to read it, and in the end I am glad that I took a chance and read it.
6 reviews
October 23, 2025
Positives:

Competency porn. Like watching Apollo 13, or reading about a real, successful American military operation, or indeed an old Jack Ryan book, it’s always thrilling to read about hard-working folks excelling at their jobs when up against a threat. This book has plenty of competent characters across the spectrum of heroes and villains.

Pacing. As a first-time reader of his, M.P. Woodward’s best attribute - for me - is his economy of words and thus time spent in each “scene.” The story is laid out quite cinematically as though the writer almost anticipates a Hollywood adaption and that results in a thrilling pace.

Fun. Despite my complaints below I still cruised through this thing because I was genuinely having a blast with the story in the same way you watch a good Sunday afternoon melt-on-the-couch movie. It’s not for the Oscar’s, it’s for a fun blockbuster.

Negatives:

Clunky jingoism. Listen, I like Clancy books. I like military-based stories. I love a basic good guys vs bad guys story. I chose to read this book. I 100% expect jingoism but Red Tide’s has the affect the old Navy tv ads the book jokes about at one point. The STORY itself and the success - the competency porn - of the characters persevering on behalf of their country should be the jingoism itself. Including unprovoked lines such as, “the world needs the US Navy,” feels like it should come with a footnote for how to contact your local recruiting office.

Characters. Specifically women. We have Cole’s wife and daughters who have ZERO personality or story stakes besides “patriotic and supportive woman-in-wait,” to their husband and boyfriends.

Sarah is apparently an amazing silver-tongued liaison to a senator yet we never once get to see that skill in action.

There’s Afra who serves the purpose of being raped and owning an inn. She kills her attackers, suppresses what happened, and succeeds at the mission. The end of her arc.

And Li is just a cold-blooded honey-pot, controlled by men higher above her and manipulating the ones below her via sex and bitchiness. And then at the end there’s a joke about her being waterboarded. A waterboarding joke in 2025. It’s not even that it’s all that offensive, it’s just eye-rollingly tired like a bad joke from an edgy coworker in 2005.

Other women in the book are shown to be leaders in their field or perhaps skilled at their job but always subordinate to a higher male character.

And look I get. It’s the armed forces. There are much more men in charge than women but to lack a single main female character who has even an attempt at a character arc that isn’t directly affected by their romantic relationship to a man is just wild. Both of the Cole sons could’ve been gender flipped to be armed forces daughters amongst others.

The male characters aren’t much better in terms of having actual story arcs. There are really none to speak of at all in fact. Will Cole becomes an Admiral and uses a self-help book’s platitudes (that sound like quotes from a motivational daily calendar) in order to succeed against nothing? He does his job and then is promoted and then wins the fight. These bits of life advice work perfectly for him every time. The end of his arc. The only drama in his life - a hinted at previous almost-divorce - has already been dealt with beyond Woodward killing the man who Cole’s wife cheated with…

Sorkin is like a Q-branch type with cancer who is never challenged and then beats cancer like he beats the Chinese fifth platform.

The Cole sons learn to be MORE patriotic and arrive on time. The end.

And the Chinese. Well, they’re cold, calculating rapists. And that’s it according to this book.

Yes, I came for a blockbuster and that means not analyzing Red Tide like it’s for Oprah’s book club, but part of fun - for me - is not rolling my eyes between the actual fun because a writer in 2025 can’t figure out what to do with women besides make them supportive sacrificial lambs, or cartoon villains who only taunt and kill and have no personal lives.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Patrick.
13 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2025
While based on an interesting topic with so many interesting rabbit holes, this book is incredibly predictable. This is one of those novels where the bad guys have all of the answers up until the last 100 pages when we “figure it out” all of a sudden. The authors takes some major leaps regarding technology that the Chinese may or may not have but assumes that we have none of it. To me it was just hard to believe.

I was actively laughing that we would plan a contested beach invasion without air superiority in the second act. Like really ? The chapter was framed like that was going to be a big shock that we failed.

It was also totally unrealistic that the admiral Cole would be totally cool with his wife actively in love with the other captain throughout the book. The passages where she describes her love for Wallace was cringeworthy, why is she still with her husband if this is the case ? Why is he still with his wife when she’s day dreaming of this dude and he knows about it ?

Now that all of the bad is out of the way I will say this book kept me engaged throughout and wasn’t miserable to read. I enjoyed the authors efforts to include all of the of the ship building challenges. Overall if you have Spotify premium go ahead and give this book a listen it’s not the worst.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Curtis Edmonds.
Author 12 books90 followers
October 31, 2025
This is probably my favorite micro-genre right now; books whose premise is that the Chinese are going to invade Taiwan and they are going to kick our asses so hard, you guys. Cautionary tales about what the Chinese are going to do next. This one isn't nearly as imaginitive, in that it doesn't have subplots about the Chinese taking control of all Allied tech through subtle changes in microchips (although there is a lot of stuff in here about microchips) or the Chinese doing something completely unexpected like packing in a couple of armored regiments in container ships and taking out Pearl Harbor. But the let's-completely-obliterate-an-American-carrier-group subtext is here, for sure.

The problem, of course, is that the first part of things (the Chinese use their technology edge and land-to-ship missiles to wipe out our naval deterrent) is much more likely than the second part of things (the US develops its own technology muscle using some sort of unexpected prowess and kicking ass). But it's a lot of fun to read and who knows how the actual war is going to turn out if there ever is one.
Profile Image for Squatch_AK.
10 reviews
October 16, 2025
Red Tide feels like a modern answer to Red Storm Rising—tight, tense, and built for today’s world. M.P. Woodward writes with the same kind of authority and insider detail that made Tom Clancy and Larry Bond so good, but his focus is sharper. The story moves fast, the characters feel real, and the stakes hit close to home.

Where Clancy painted on a global canvas, Woodward zeroes in on the people caught inside the machine—operatives, analysts, and decision-makers all walking the line between duty and survival. It’s grounded, believable, and filled with that quiet intensity that keeps you reading long past when you meant to stop.

If Red Storm Rising defined the Cold War era, Red Tide captures the tension and uncertainty of ours. It’s smart, authentic, and flat-out compelling. I’m already looking forward to whatever M.P. Woodward writes next.

Profile Image for Read Ng.
1,372 reviews26 followers
January 18, 2026
I have been anticipating this book for a while. It could have been just a bit better. Perhaps I expected too much. This near future sea battle centers around Taiwan and computer chip manufacturers. Not really about reclaiming Taiwan. A very current potential conflict zone.

I would have preferred a bit more insight from the Chinese side to balance out the tale. What is their real end goal and why this time is the right time. This story does center around a Naval family. That does help to identify with a large group of spread out to various battle fronts, but set me on expectations that it was moving to a TV miniseries. Just an area I have less interest in.

There was plenty of innovative high tech military applications. The action sequences had room for a bit lengthier descriptive expansion. There could have been a bit more suspense.

Overall this was still a GoodReads.
5 reviews
October 10, 2025
Highly recommend Red Tide

Review: Red Tide by M.P. Woodward
I picked up Red Tide after seeing a recommendation from Jack Carr, and I’m glad I did. This book was a fast-paced, high-stakes thriller that pulled me in from the first chapter. Woodward not only builds suspense and delivers great action but also creates a genuine emotional connection with the Cole family.
The story balances intensity and humanity in a way that made me feel both joy and sadness as it unfolded. It’s rare to find a thriller that hits that emotional depth while keeping such relentless momentum.
Red Tide is an unexpected gem — smart, gripping, and deeply personal. I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys authentic, character-driven espionage thrillers.
32 reviews
October 29, 2025
Really enjoyed listing to the book and only have one minor comment. When Admiral Cole was landing on the USS Lincoln to me it implied he looked through the windshield of the aircraft and saw the Lincoln which from my experience is impossbile if you are strapped in since the seats in a C-2a Greyhound face aft not forward. In the final Henry Cole is flying a FA-18 with anti-air and 3 lazer guided bombs. He gets in a furball with Chinese aircraft and does not jettison his bombs. Now I'm not a pilot but I would suspect he would have to give himself a better air to air configuration if he had of. Will not say the outcome due to it would be a spolier for others.
Overall an excellent story!!
5 reviews
October 7, 2025
I just couldn’t put it down.

I’m sure there was a lot of technical detail that was left out or gotten just plain wrong, but I think if the book had spent too much time on realism the story would have gotten bogged down. At the same time, it was just detailed enough to be believable and the general ideas regarding the technology of future war were credible and well-presented. I really liked it.
342 reviews1 follower
October 18, 2025
A well written techno thriller based in naval strategy and geo political reality.The various characters be it an Admiral and his family, all who contribute to the war effort which resulted from a Chinese seizure of a vital computer chip manufacturing plant in Taiwan and various advanced tech battle strategies made it an enjoyable bur disturbing read if this is a future conflict.
Many years ago read a series of books Red storm rising which were similar.
I did enjoy this book.
4 reviews
October 23, 2025
It was alright - how it ended felt a bit cheap, and I found the family aspect a little contrived, but there were some interesting aspects. I think a more nuanced exploration of the Chinese side would’ve been better - as is, they felt a little one dimensional, though I suppose that’s at least in part due to the author’s ideological bent, which bled through at a few points. Still, I liked the descriptions of how modern technology is changing the nature of naval combat
Profile Image for Stacy.
179 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2025
I listened to the audiobook

This was an interesting action novel, following the "fighting" Cole family of Naval officers during a near-future hypothetical naval war between the us and China over Taiwan chip manufacturing.

Overall I enjoyed this military action story, but the American exceptionalism themes were a bit overdone and the characters and dialogue were wooden and indistinguishable at best. The premise, of the next phase of military supremacy, was interesting and compelling.
418 reviews5 followers
September 27, 2025
Over view of conditions and possibilities: reality check

This story surveys the many layers and dimensions of war. People of all countries engage in conflict and peacekeeping, willingly or as ordered by government and military authorities. Woodward shows how war becomes personal, political, bureaucratic, competitive, and creative. Can China be contained?
Profile Image for James Winchell.
268 reviews7 followers
October 15, 2025
Someone said a new coming of the Tom Clancy great Red Storm Rising, 100% agree. Great story on what could happen anytime over in the South China Sea, M. P. took his knowledge of the subject and put it on paper and made a masterpiece. Sad, decisive action, and gripping story all combined into a book.
355 reviews
October 18, 2025
It is a story of the next potential battle that the USA could face. It is also a story on tactics and technology and the things we should do to be ready. It is also a story of a family, like many of our military families, that have dedicated themselves to the safety of our country. Openly showing the joys, the challenges and the sorrows. Well worth the read.
6 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2026
Awesome book, and in many ways. likely story that I hope never happens

Well written and to the point in many ways. The next war is one that will not be waged as previous ones were. This book sets up the issues and changes that need to happen, all while being in a faced paced gripping tale.
Profile Image for Paul.
218 reviews2 followers
January 19, 2026
TOP 5-Technothrillers:
5. Clear and Present Danger. My favorite of the Jack Ryans. Jack and GW Bush as BFF? Hilarity ensues.
4. Centurions. Bonus points for the chillingly-realistic ending.
3. Cryptonomicon. The most literary, and best book of the five.
2. Team Yankee. On-the-ground realism. Blew my mind as a teenager.
1. Red Storm Rising. The gold standard.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews

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