Iran is much closer to having operational nuclear weapons than the CIA believes, and Iran's president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, has a plan. With twelve nuclear warheads mounted on twelve missiles, he will make Iran a martyr nation; then he will lead the world's Muslims in a holy war against the nonbelievers. However, the Americans have a secret weapon in a group of Iranian dissidents, including a brother and sister determined to avenge the death of their beloved grandfather at the hands of the religious police. They are funneling information to Tommy Carmellini. They want to stop the attack before their leader launches a new world war. Will the U.S. government believe the information they are providing, and can the Americans prevent the Israelis from taking matters into their own hands, which could prove disastrous?
Stephen Coonts (born July 19, 1946) is an American thriller and suspense novelist.
Coonts grew up in Buckhannon, West Virginia, a small coal-mining town and earned an B.A. degree in political science at West Virginia University in 1968. He entered the Navy the following year and flew an A-6 Intruder medium attack plane during the Vietnam War, where he served on two combat cruises aboard the USS Enterprise (CVN-65). He accumulated 1600 hours in the A-6 Intruder and earned a number of Navy commendations, including the Distinguished Flying Cross. After the war he served as a flight instructor on A-6 aircraft for two years, then did a tour as an assistant catapult and arresting gear officer aboard USS Nimitz (CVN-68). His navigator-bombardier was LTjg Stanley W. Bryant who later became a Rear Admiral and deputy commander-in-chief of the US naval forces in Europe.
After being honorably discharged from duty as a lieutenant in 1977, Coonts pursued a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree at the University of Colorado, graduating in 1979. He then worked as an oil and gas lawyer for several companies, entertaining his writing interests in his free time.
He published short stories in a number of publications before writing Flight of the Intruder in 1986 (made into a movie in 1991). Intruder, based in part on his experiences as a bomber pilot, spent 28 weeks on the New York Times bestseller lists in hardcover and launched his career as a novelist. From there he continued writing adventure-mysteries using the character from his first book, Jake Grafton. He has written several other series and stand-alone novels since then, but is most notable for the Grafton books.
Today Coonts continues to write, having had seventeen New York Times bestsellers (out of 20 books), and lives in Las Vegas, Nevada with his wife and son.
"God willing, with the force of God behind it, we shall soon experience a world without the united States and Zionism"
That sentence sets a tone of religous bigorty and fanatism and extreme danger. The book fails to deliver after that preamble.
The first chapters are told in 3rd person, and deal with snippets of conspiracy that are hard to grasp and even harder to care about.
The protaganist is introduced in a bluntly cliche manner, he strolls down a street of Iran, and it immdediately set upon by 2/3? thugs and leaves them pounded into the ground. Then we're filled in with a block of Iranian history which isn't too bad, if it wasn't so obviously "look I did my research" by the author and then later ruined by obsurd speculation about the sex life of radical Islam.
We even get narrative from the president of Iran Ahmadinejad, who is effectively a sex offender with THE MOST RIDICULOUS PLAN FOR IRAN EVER, did you get that? MOST RIDICULOUS PLAN EVER. Now I don't want you to read this book just becuase you're curious about what could be so stupid, but I feel that in charity I should leave some reason to pick this thing up.
The philosophies are heavy handed, the attempt for depth by having a novel floating around thats banned by the Iranian government lacks the depth it tries to create. All the senseless plotting makes it difficult to understand what everyone is trying to do.
In short Coonts tries to combine, James Bond, Three Cups of Tea and Tom Clancy into one novel and fails to get anything worthwhile out of it. With dialogue like "Hi hot lips" melodramtic beatings and rape and the worst prose I've read in a long time : "The president said his voice pregnant with relief" The disciple is best left alone.
Excellent book using real life bad guys (or governments). Even though it is a book of fiction, I can totally see something like this being planed in Iran and I can see the end not turning out as well as it did in the book with our current administration. Enuf said, read the book for yourself and enjoy the action. Jake Grafton is still one of my favorite characters in fiction after all these years!
Barely tolerable military/spy thriller with a bit of a war thrown in. Slow in places and never really got going as it jumped about between a variety of characters and all up a bit confusing. Not good.
This story never quite made it. It didn't get interesting until about 3/4 of the way through, and even then it wasn't much. I don't like to quit a book once I've started it, else I would've given up in the first 30-40 pages.
Another excellent Tommy Carmellini and Jake Grafton book. Very weak written and holds you in suspense from start to finish. I can't wait to start the next one in the series. I hope that Stephen Coonts has book featuring g this dynamic pair in the future.
Kept me interested--different than most books in that the war actually HAPPENED. It was not prevented by the hero at the last minute. Good leisure read if you like spy/action novels.
This book was copyrighted in 2009 when Ahmadinejad was in power in Iran and had made two announcements germane to this book: that Iran was building a nuclear power program (for domestic power purposes - nod nod wink wink) and that Israel must be wiped off the face of this earth. Stephen Coonts then takes this and develops it into the extreme wherein Ahmadinejad decides to develop nuclear weapons and attack both Israel, American bases, and certain other targets hoping to start World War 3 and unite the Muslim World in a Holy Jihad against the infidel states.
The book is well written and still timely, but if you are sensitive about the subject matter, this book might not be appropriate.
Super Spy Tommy Carmellini is dispatched to Iran by Jake Grafton to search for evidence of nuclear weapons. As usual, Tommy seems to live a constant death defying adventure being blown up, tortured, escaping gunfire and managing to save the day.
I enjoy reading the adventures of Americas greatest reformed jewel thief now working for the CIA. This book has got to be his greatest adventure, until I read the next Jake Grafton-Tommy Carmelleni adventure. I'm an action adventure fan and Jake and Tommy have never disappointed me.
The strongest part of the novel is the protagonist. Here's one MC who deserves his perspective, IMO, and the first person narration helped. The other parts were meh to good, side characters were all right, plot was fine, weird to see actual politicians in this fictional setting but it's a style thing. The way they handled the female protagonist and antagonist was questionable, even with the facade of "oh she's crazy." But at least this passes the standard thriller test.
After reading a good number of Jake Grafton/Tommy Carmellini books by Stephen Coonts, I had decided to try out some new authors of spy/terrorist type novels. I did find some other terrific authors who wrote great stories. I then came back to Stephen Coonts with The Disciple. It was like old home week and I settled in to the familiar writing style of Coonts. I happen to prefer stories of intrigue in areas like Paris, Russia, the United States, etc. In this case, the story centers in Iran and spends much time with oppressed characters in that country. As such, I knocked off a half-star (but can't do half so I took off a full star) because oppression isn't as fun as glitz and glammor of Paris hotels. But the story itself is great. I particularly liked the last 20% of the story (I read on Kindle) as Jake Grafton and all our top political and military leaders become prominent in the story which leads to an exciting ending.
Side note: While I did say that I prefer glitz and glammor, I am currently reading Pirate Alley by Stephen Coonts. Here's another story that is the total opposite of glitz and glammor. But the story is so great that I'll be giving it five stars.
Until the last chapters, I did not enjoy Coonts' tale of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad nuclear warheads mounted on 12 missiles heading towards major world targets. He even targeted Iran to make it a martyr nation leading a holy war. Tommy Carmellini, Davar, Darma, and Admiral Jake Grafton are working together to try to stop it.
One of the best Carmellini/Grafton books I have read. So real I could sense the pain & suffering of the innocent. A eye opener for the world about 3rd world countries trying to gain nuclear weapons. It’s never a good thing!
An interesting view and thriller within Iran and the politics of the clerics and politicians trying to turn the world to their type of world and Jake Grafton and Tommie Carmelini working to prevent WW III.
A good tale, but the author has written in some very implausible actions by many of the characters. This took the air and realism out of the story periodically.
This was a good one! I love that Tommy Carmellini’s voice is first person. I love the sarcasm throughout the book. Nuclear bombs should not be a thing! Can’t wait to read the next one.
A great book with great characters and a really interesting look at Iran it’s beautiful people, and it’s awful leadership and what it’s done to the country
The story in a nutshell... American bombs good. Iranian bombs bad. American government, intelligent and just. Iranian government, stupid and evil. Not much more than that.