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The Cardinal Of The Kremlin

The Cardinal Of The Kremlin

List Price: $23.50
Your Price: $15.98
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Intriguing from page one
Review: This book is a fast paced, high stakes espionage fest that will leave you way behind on your to-do list. From the Archer, to the familiar characters of Ryan, Mancuso, Ramius and back to newer characters like the Foleys and Clark, the characters carry the action to compelling heights. We see the stakes from their perspective, and that helps us to feel the danger that is looming over the world.
Easily the least technical in terms of war machines, this is Clancy's most compelling plot. With Ryan flying everywhere and finding himself in Moscow at the unexpected and satisfying conclusion, readers will applaud another great story.
Strengths: Several subplots are woven seamlessly into a strong finish. Ryan's real human reactions and intelligence give us a protagonist we believe and root for. An intelligent read.
Weaknesses: None come to mind. Doesn't suffer from the sometimes verbose technical descriptions some of his other work has.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Cardinal of the Kremlin
Review: This book was extremely entertaining. One thing that made it good was that I had trouble putting it down to do other things. I enjoyed how at the beginning of the story, the different plots appeared to have no connection, but came back to be intertwined, with each part important to the story. I also liked reading the vivid descriptions that Tom Clancy wrote; I felt that I was actually in and involved with the story while reading. This was a great book and I fully recomend it to others.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My Favorite Clancy Book
Review: This is probably the most interesting Clancy book that I have read, and I've read about half a dozen of them so far. The main reason for this is that Clancy manages to get almost all of his major characters into this book. Besides Jack Ryan (obviously), we get to meet Ed and Mary Foley for the first time, as well as John Clark. Clancy even brings back Ramius, Mancuso, and Jones from the Hunt for Red October. The story itself is not action-packed by Clancy standards, but I guarantee you will learn a lot of new information by reading it. Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys any of Clancy's other books, this is the best of the bunch!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Cardinal of the Kremlin - An exceptional novel!
Review: Of all of Tom Clancy's novels that I've either read or reread, I would think it would be difficult to sit back and say, this novel or that one is the best of them, but if forced to choose, I'd say that "The Cardinal of the Kremlin" is the best one. Contained within the pages of this novel is some of the most fluid writing that one can find in a novel from this genre. From taut political intrigue to suspenseful military action this novel scores in every area.

The particularly great thing that one can anticipate and not be disappointed in when contemplating a Clancy novel, is that he covers all of the bases and leave nothing out. The scope and detail that Clancy worked into this novel is mind boggling as he sets up so many variables and then works you through to the conclusion of every one of those variables.

"The Cardinal of the Kremlin" is author Tom Clancy's fourth novel overall and more importantly, the third in his "Ryanverse." One of the more important things about reading a Clancy novel is the fact that he seems to have set things up for himself rather nicely because you will find "possible" hints at where he's going with either his next book or one down the road. You will find references to the Cardinal, throughout his previous books as well as other references in his earlier novels that are leading to his later novels.

Taut political intriguing + suspenseful military action + in depth characterizations + a plot of epic proportion = "The Cardinal of the Kremlin."

The premise:

"The Cardinal of the Kremlin" is so large in its scope and detail that it may be difficult to summarize the plot here, in so few words available.

What drives this novel, first and foremost, is Dr. Jack Ryan who is by the release of this novel the well known lead character from "The Hunt for Red October" and "Patriot Games." As the novel begins, we find that Dr. Ryan is still working as an analyst for the CIA's DDI, Deputy Director of Intelligence. He's presently trying to work up a paper based the current negotiations between the United States and the USSR on ICBM's.

We're then taken to the "Archer" who is an Afghanistan resistance fighter and part of the mudjaheddin. Due to what the Soviets have done to him and his family, he has no love lost for them, they even captured his son and taken him to the Soviet Union for "reeducation," hence his intense desire to fight and kill as many Soviets as he can.

From there we're introduced to the "Cardinal" of the Kremlin, Misha Filitov who is a Colonel in the Soviet Army and a three time Hero of the Soviet Union from his days as a tank commander in the Great War. Hinted at in previous Clancy novels, this Colonel has been disillusioned by the way of life in the Soviet Union which has caused the death of his wife and his son, hence his having been turned by American agents. In his present position with the Defense Ministry, he has been passing Soviets secrets to the Americans for thirty years.

What follows from there is one of author; Tom Clancy's most intriguing and entertaining novels to date that will have you, the reader, turning the pages voraciously trying to get to the end of it to see how it ends. The scope and detail of this novel is simply incredible.

I highly recommend not only this Clancy novel but all of his novels for he is truly the master of this genre. {ssintrepid}

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good - One of the best Clancy Book I've read so far
Review: Loved the start where Clancy describes the Archer shooting down a chopper and taking care of it's surviving pilot. I also loved the way Clancy has intergrated so many seemingly seperate plots and the coming together of them at the end. I especially congratulate him on the amazing, yet believable interrogation tactics employed by the Russians in this book. As usual with Clancy books there are quite a number of pages to turn but it is fully worth the effort - I'm sure I will read it again someday. I recommend this book to anyone looking for a good spy thriller.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Another Good One
Review: This one turned out better than I thought it would be. The story is supposed to be about "Star Wars" missile defense, but actually focuses on a well repected Soviet colonel spying for the Americans, with missile defense as only a back drop. Surpisingly, Jack Ryan has little involvement until more towards the end. Like most Clancy novels, the story is very thrilling, this time involving the espionage involved in the "Star Wars" programs. What also adds to the story is that some of it takes place in the Afgan War between the Mujahadeen and the Soviets. The story really gets interesting when the Soviets begin investigating the activities of the Soviet colonel. The story culminates with his escape and a Mujahadeen attack on a Soviet Star Wars research facility close to the Afgan border, which, although exciting, seemed somewhat unrealistic, which is why it only got 4 stars. Otherwise, the book is a very interesting read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: very good espionage thriller
Review: Clancy focuses on the intricacies of spycraft in The Cardinal of the Kremlin and introduces the CIA agents Ed and Mary Pat Foley who will appear in several of the Jack Ryan books. Terrific "behind-the-Curtain" plotting and counterplotting in Moscow. Interesting story driven mostly by plot that includes significant technical detail that has come to define a Tom Clancy novel.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cardinal is Classic Clancy
Review: Cardinal of the Kremlin, the third novel in the Jack Ryan series and Tom Clancy's fourth published book, was - until 2002's Red Rabbit - the closest to a traditional espionage tale that dealt with the nuts-and-bolts of spying. It is also the closest that a Clancy novel resembles an Ian Fleming James Bond story, although Jack Ryan never steps out of his non-Bondian character.

In some of the better Bond films (From Russia With Love comes to mind), 007 was often sent to either steal or destroy some new gadget or weapon that would upset the power balance between the non-communist West and the Soviet bloc. And although The Hunt for Red October had some of this thematic linkage to Ian Fleming's "restoration of the balance of power" stories, Cardinal of the Kremlin is Clancy's deepest exploration of the notion that espionage-is-the-best-defense when superpowers are in an arms race.

Set one year after the defection of Red October, Cardinal of the Kremlin chronicles the efforts of both the United States and the Soviet Union to develop a defensive system against intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), even as both sides are negotiating a treaty to reduce their nuclear arsenals. Both superpowers want information on their opponents' "Star Wars" programs; both nations' intelligence agencies have agents and "moles" working feverishly to get that information.

Of these "moles" (insiders who spy for the "other side"), none is more important than the agent the CIA knows as "Cardinal." "Cardinal" is perhaps America's most highly prized intelligent source, for he is none other than Col. Mikhail "Misha" Filitov, a highly decorated hero of the Great Patriotic War (World War II). A three-time winner of the Hero of the Soviet Union and wounded in the largest tank battle of the war at Kursk, this once-loyal officer has become disillusioned by the nature of the State he has served and becomes a spy for America. His status as a bona fide hero allows him to become an aide to two Defense Ministers, making "Cardinal" a fine source of classified material to the Central Intelligence Agency. It is through "Cardinal" that CIA discovers how far along the Soviets' own Star Wars program is coming.

On the Soviet side, the American mole is Bea Taussig, an embittered scientist who has a grudge with one of the military officers who is assigned to the Star Wars project. Although she also gets a thrill by trying to outsmart the FBI and CIA by providing her KGB "handlers" with classified information, her agenda is far more personal.

As in most of Clancy's Ryan novels, the action is far-flung. The plot takes readers from the cubicles of CIA headquarters at Langley, VA, to the snow-capped peaks of Afghanistan (where the mujahedin are fighting the Soviet occupation), to the halls of power of both Washington and Moscow.

Here, too, Clancy continues his technique of weaving the Ryan novels into one big tapestry. Marko Ramius is back, as are Cmdr. Bart Mancuso and Ron Jones, aboard USS Dallas for one last and very classified mission into Soviet waters. Cardinal himself was introduced in The Hunt For Red October, and some of the story threads that will remain hanging will not be tied up till The Sum of All Fears and even later novels.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: After Hunt for RO
Review: Have audio tape and didn't enjoy is as much as without remorse. This is my least favorite, but still 4 stars.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A most authentic espionage book!
Review: I've read a few of Tom Clancy's books and to my opinion, this is the best of them. A most authentic espionage book. One that saves you from the technical details of technology (though still he explains richfuly and tastefuly of a newly anti-setallite system) and focuses on the spying buisness. The plot gets more exciting each time you flip the page. Amazing stuff, I tell you.
While reading the book, I just could'nt let go of it, two weeks were all I needed, and I'm pretty sure I'll read it again. Try it, what do ya have to lose !?


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