When China and India join forces to launch a nuclear strike against the United States, one young man discovers, in the chaos that follows, that the only people who can survive in the new world order of the 1990s are killers
Dean Charles Ing was an American author, who usually wrote in the science fiction and techno-thriller genres.
He earned a bachelor’s degree from Fresno State University (1956), a master’s degree from San Jose State University (1970), and a Ph.D. from the University of Oregon (1974). It was his work in communication theory at the University of Oregon that prompted him to turn to writing in the 1970s.
Dean Ing was a veteran of the United States Air Force, an aerospace engineer, and a university professor who holds a doctorate in communications theory. He became professional writer in 1977. Ing and his wife lived in Oregon.
Much of Ing's fiction includes detailed, practical descriptions of techniques and methods which would be useful in an individual or group survival situation, including instructions for the manufacture of tools and other implements, the recovery of stuck vehicles and avoidance of disease and injury.
In addition to his fiction writing, Ing wrote nonfiction articles for the survivalist newsletter P.S. Letter, edited by Mel Tappan. Following in the footsteps of sci-fi novelist Pat Frank, Ing included a lengthy nonfiction appendix to his nuclear war survival novel Pulling Through.
In Ing’s fiction, his characters are involved with scientific or engineering solutions and entrepreneurial innovation, elements drawn from his own experience. A lifelong tinkerer, designer, and builder, he was an Air Force crew chief and a senior engineer for United Technologies and Lockheed. His characters know how things work, and they use ingenuity and engineering to solve situational challenges. Ing's work reflects the Oregon traditions of self-reliant independence and suspicion of authority.
“Since I deplore the voracious appetite of the public for entertainment-for-entertainment’s sake,” he told an interviewer in 1982, “most of my work has a clear didactic element. . . . I believe that Jefferson’s ideal of the independent yeoman farmer should be familiar to every generation because I mistrust a technological society in which most members are thoroughly incompetent to maintain the hardware or the software.”
This book came out in 1981. I was thirteen then and I read the whole thing straight through. Set in 1997 with a sixteen-year-old protagonist who becomes a government agent. Basically, it's a YA novel. Over the past nineteen years I've re-read it more than once and every time I've enjoyed it along with the two sequels, Single Combat and Wild Country.
There are elements in the series that are now dated, but that is beside the point. They accomplish what good science fiction should do, they take the reader to another reality and make it believable. There has never been a fourth installment in the series. At the end of Wild Country (released 1985) there are hints of what is coming in the next installment, but twenty-six years later (I write this review in 2011) there is still no fourth book. Mr. Ing died in 2021 so my guess it the series ended in 1985. Oh well.
This is the first book in Dean Ing's "Quantrill" trilogy. In short, the book is about a teenage boy swept up in World War III and its immediate aftermath. Being a post-apocalyptic junkie, I bought this book on setting alone.
This is a hard book to rate, as there are many aspects I liked and a nearly equal list of aspects that I disliked.
LIKES There was a decent amount of action, of both types ("abstracted" between countries and "personal" between Quantrill and his foes). World War III was handled in a fairly logical fashion. As can be expected of a book written in 1981 and portraying a war in the mid 90's, there were some mistakes with predicting the various technologies that would be available to the combatants. These mistakes can be forgiven...(let he with the infallible crystal ball throw the first stone). Here is the important tidbit...the story scratched my post-apoc itch. I can forgive some minor quibbles to get that itch scratched.
DISLIKES The author used this book to preach "the Gospel According to Ing". Examples that grated on my nerves include a diatribe about how victimized people who fail to fight back against their attackers are ultimately to blame for being victimized. Apparently Ing was never bullied by someone more powerful...lucky for him.
***SPOILER ALERT*** Another disturbing portrayal involved the Mormons(Church of Latter Day Saints). Ing put Mormons into two camps...power-grabbing theocrats that put the agendas of their religion ahead of the well-being of the U.S. and despicable, pillaging misogynists. I do not understand or approve of Ing's bias against the Mormons.
A minor dislike involves the literary device of divulging the story via a semi-literate pre-teen girl's diary. That was just plain painful to experience. ***END SPOILER***
In short, I liked the post-apoc parts but disliked being an unwilling listener to Ing's bias. I have not made up my mind in regards to pursuing book 2 and 3 of this series.
A weird tale of a multi-front war with India, China, and Russia as players and a 15 year old kid who becomes an assassin. Still not sure what I think about it, besides vague ambivalence.
15 year old Ted Quantrill is on a scouting camp in the bush when WW3 begins. India and China are in a bloc against the US and RUS (the USSR after splitting in a nice piece of prescience) which began ostensibly over oil. Nuclear bombardment was followed by neutron bombs then plague weapons making for a blakanized US and a very worried Mormon President and cabinet, which moves regularly to avoid targeting. After Ted's family is killed by the initial conflagration he is bitter and ends up enlisting with the Army and is enticed into the secretive spy arm known as T Section. Trained to kill and be aloof the gunsels (as the trained gunslingers are called) set out to remove the lawless and wicked in the desert southwest and hopefully rescue a young girl and her infant sister. Dean Ing has written a gritty post-apocalypse future with carefully worked out geopolitics (which don't work now but might have) and despite being dated is reasonably entertaining. First of a trilogy I think.
Finally someone at Amazon got a clue ! This book was one of the first apocalyptic stories and has been around for at LEAST 30 years. I have looked for it several times a year hoping it would be "discovered" Mr. Ing's ability to switch from a single person's perspective to tactical and even strategic views is matchless. The way he casually drops scary-real possibilities of the future had me reading this book years ago in 1 sitting . To the readers who like the book hold on---- there is at least one sequel. (Get the hint Amazon huh? Huh?) I can't say enough good about this book, about Kindle's selection process not so much but at least it is a start. Bill Hodges
I read this book several decades ago, yet it has stayed in my mind as to how our society can be utterly torn apart by what seem to be innoxious events in themselves.
The storyline/characters are very raw in their behaviour. This speaks to what can happen when the foundation of the society and culture is distorted beyond recognition. The characters adapt to the harsh world they live in in the best way that they can.
With the recent increase in tension between India and Pakistan, I find myself remembering this book with more than a little apprehension.
This book is a little dated as it was written in the early '80s, but it is still a good read. A war between the US with Russia as our ally vs. China, India, most of Asia and South America. Significant use of nuclear and biological weapons occur in the book. Some of the technology is a little dated, but the author did foresee the dissolution of the Soviet Union. I have the second book and will read it soon but I will not be keeping these books as to me they are not worthy of another reading.
Having reread this after a decade or so, I still like it. Yes, it is dated to a degree (WWIII takes place in 1996), but that does not really detract from the story. Ing's prose may be offsetting for some-- it is rather frenetic and sometimes reads like loosely tied together news articles. So, I enjoyed it and am ready for the sequel!
Most times, when I am reading I am also playing the movie in my mind. Right away I cast Kurt Russell in the lead role of this apocolyptic saga which reminded me of the movie "Soldier". The rest of the characters were no-names. Other than that There wasn't anything remarkable about the book.
I thoroughly hated this book. It pissed me off constantly, and not in a good, thought-provoking Animal-Farm way. The characters seem intent on finding every way imaginable of debasing themselves.
Really only a little dated after all these years. Ing builds this story against a geopolitical situation that is still conceivable today, if only the dates were pushed out another 25-30 years.