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The President as a Leader not a Politician
Jun 15, 2005 04:35 PM 2953 Views
(Updated Jun 15, 2005 04:37 PM)

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Executive Orders is the sequel to Debt of Honor and I believe this is


the last book in the Jack Ryan series.


At the end of Debt of Honor, Jack Ryan becomes President of the US,


the most powerful man on earth. The country was faced with a


leadership crisis and there was no one but Jack Ryan to step in. If


you have read any Jack Ryan book, you would know that he is not a


politician/bureaucrat but a hard hitting analyst. The infamous US


press aided by an ex-Vice President attacks his life, policies and


every decision.


The world also takes note of this, assumes Jack to be a wimp instead


of a hawk and many nations start taking liberties in international


matters. An assassination in Middle East leads to flaring of matters,


China-Taiwan issue comes up again and there is a huge domestic crisis.


Can Jack deal with all these matters alongside the fact that his


family life and every step he takes invite public scrutiny and


criticism from the press? Will he be able to return USA to previous


status quo in world matters? This is the central idea around which the


story evolves.


I thought I knew what to expect from a Tom Clancy novel but here he


has surpassed my expectations.The details regarding the Presidential


Security, various crisis occurring around the world, the operation of


Press in US etc have never seemed truer. At the end of the novel,


there is a war that USA has to fight. Descriptions of army vehicles,


tanks, soldiers, their feelings, strategies employed in the war etc


are as close to reality as a civilian like me can hope for.


I think after Executive Orders, there has been one more Tom Clancy


novel which features Jack Ryan's son. Haven't read that yet but should be


good. At 1358 pages, this book is the thickest book I've yet read


(more than Atlas Shrugged or LOTR) and I don't see any book close


enough to break this record yet.


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