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The Bear and the Dragon

The Bear and the Dragon

List Price: $27.95
Your Price: $19.56
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Disappointing...
Review: After Rainbow Six, I told myself I would never read another Tom Clancy novel...but I gave him one more chance. I think I wasted my money. The Bear and the Dragon is dreadful slow to develop, wooden characters with wooden thoughts and wooden dialogue, too many sub-plots, anachronistic (has Mr Clancy been to China recently --- his China is not today's China at all). What's happened to Jack Ryan? Where's our decisive man of action gone? The book is far too long for the story. It needs a good editor with a sharp pen.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Clancy returns to an R Rated book
Review: Wow - another techno thriller that I could not put down. The content and structure, for the most part, was great and sure listed some very likely screnarios with all the techno info that Mr. Clancy is famous for. Unfortunately this will probably be the last Clancy book I read. Similar in nature to Without Remorse, Mr Clancy, with this book, is setting a new tone for this and coming books where gratuitous profanity and sex have a much higher profile than ever before. I wish that Mr Clancy would take a queue from Mr Cussler, who wanted readers of all ages and sensibilities to be able to read his books, and took his books to that level by taking out the gratuitous profanity and sex with great success.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Boring, boring, boring
Review: I've read all of Clancy's books, excluding the paperback series. Progressively they haved grown longer and more tedious. I don't know that I would even read the next. I was very dissapointed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Outstanding
Review: When I first got this book I thought it'll be bad 'cos of the reviews I read,but I found out something .The book to someone who hasn't been reading Clancy's book maybe 2-3,but for someone following all his books it's a 4.I think the only book that's beats it hands down will be Without Remorse.I honestly don't think he can beat that any longer.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good read, familiar Clancy strengths and weaknesses
Review: Confrontation between a weakened, fragmented Russia and a newly aggressive and acquisitive China, with the United States forced to take a hand in the conflict, forms the basis for Clancy's latest work. As always, Clancy makes it easy for the reader to suspend disbelief; anyone familiar with today's headlines can readily imagine that the events depicted in The Bear and the Dragon could actually happen (more or less).

The book benefits from some traditional Clancy strengths: strong writing, a familiar cast of engaging characters and an superb ability to explain the technology, tactics and art of war in a lucid and compelling way that forces the reader to keep turning the pages.

Unfortunately, it also suffers from some recurrent problems (to my mind, at least) that have become familiar to Clancy readers, and make this a good book, rather than a great one: gushy, uncritical adoration of the military and intelligence establishments, the tendency to portray the "good guys", all of whom are to the right of Albert Speer, as flawlessly noble, strong and wise, while depicting their antagonists as two-dimensional, fairly uninteresting characters who combine comic-book evil with enough doltishness to make their defeat inevitable.

The biggest drawback to this book, though, is the same one we've seen in all of Clancy's recent work: his apparent inability to shut up. The Bear and the Dragon is at least 30 percent too long. Clancy's success as a writer gives him the ability to veto editorial suggestions that he blue-pencil a few hundred (or few thousand) words here and there, and Clancy fans quickly develop skill at the art of skimming.

I've read all of Clancy's work, and, problems notwithstanding, I'll continue to read him. His strengths as a writer overshadow his weaknesses, and I still hold out hope that he'll return to the standards he set in Hunt for Red October and Red Storm Rising.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not too shabby
Review: This book is by far on of Tom Clancy's best novels besides Rainbow Six and Sum of All Fears. It's full of action, spy and mind racing adventure. The only downpart was the "japanese sausage" part. It was kind of lame, (especially since i'm a guy) Anyhow, I highly reccomend this book to all Clancy fans and others.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Preachy and Slow
Review: I have read all of Mr. Clancy's books in this series. This one was something of a disappointment. From the outset, he uses Jack Ryan's thoughts and speeches to preach social conservative agenda items. I don't disagree with those items nor do I strongly agree with them but he should have toned it down some. For example, in several passages abortion is brought up. The story was predictable but slow to develop. Ther was also a problem with incomplete story lines. The Rainbow Six team at first seemed to be a primary part of the story but actually played a small role. All that aside, it was good to see what happened to Jack Ryan after the last book. I look forward to the next one in this series.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Mediocre work despite an interesting premise
Review: Clancy appears to have decided not to put a great deal of effort into his latest work, borrowing liberally from one of his first efforts, _Red Storm Rising_. Unfortunately, this book doesn't quite match up to that earlier work. This is a long book, not just in the number of pages, but in the feel. Unlike most of his past efforts, it's in no way a page turner, but instead you read on simply to get to the end. And when you get there, be prepared for disappointment. After setting up an interesting premise, Clancy wraps everything up more neatly than most Christmas presents. The only plus to the work is the characters long time Clancy readers have grown to know so well--they remain generally the same, and are fun to follow, but their talents could be much better used. Perhaps it's time for Clancy to start a new series, as he appears to be tired of dreaming up new problems for Jack Ryan.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Clancy is a master storyteller
Review:

This is another winner by Tom Clancy. The plot is convoluted, with several different stories going on at once, and each one captures you. Clancy moves back and forth from one to the other, and interconnects them skillfully. Amazon's editorial review pretty well covers it.

Clancy is the master storyteller. He has no peer when it comes to action stories and contemporary situations. He has done his research. His characters live and breathe, and his situations are plausible and well-drawn. This is a big book--over 1,000 pages--but it will hold your interest to the end.

Joseph Pierre



Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Oh well...
Review: Spell-checking his German would have helped. Getting some of the details right would have been helpful as well. The book is VERY good yarn (thus the three stars), but it's also annoying in it's nationalism (let's call it chauvinism) and stereotypes that border on rascism. Warning: Members of the political left and citizens of non-NATO states might feel offended.


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