Rating:  Summary: This bunny keeps going and going...for too long Review: Certainly not one of Clancy's best. The book goes on about twice as long as it needs to for what actually happens; and what does happen is a little slow for the most part. If it didn't involve the Pope, this story would only rate as a subplot in one of Clancy's best novels. I also agree with the other reviewers about oddly repeated sentences and the numerous Starbuck's references (own some stock and trying to drive the price up Tom?). Worth a read if you like his other books, but you might want to borrow it instead of buying it.
Rating:  Summary: The worst of the bunch Review: I can't believe I read the whole thing!. What a bore, when we got to what I thought would be exciting (the border crossing, or the kill attempt), each was about one page long. The pontification about the Catholic religion was misplaced. And to hear the hero Ryan whining endlessly about being away from home for a few nights, please!
Rating:  Summary: Did he get paid by the word? Review: Unfortunately, this wordy,ponderous,repetitious tree waster is no where near the quality I have come to know and love from Clancy. Clearly, he has done some terrific work , such as Red Storm Rising, Executive Orders, Bear & Dragon,etc. While a game attempt at some real history, Red Rabbit has none of the usual suspense and complexity I expect from this writer. Hey Tom, next time, when you are 1/2 way through it, and it doesn't look good, just trash it, and come up with something we can all be proud of.
Rating:  Summary: Clancy's Last Play Review: When we heard about a new Clancy book with the old characters, we couldn't wait to pay big money for the hardcover version - after all, it is Clancy! What a tedious tome it turned out to be - dragging along, slogging through all the Russian nicknames reminiscent of Dr. Zhivago and the obscure military acronyms. If that weren't enough, Clancy's vocabulary has slipped a bit (i.e. "martyrship" and "when I disassembled a frog"). And the reference to making babies slowly so they don't come out funny-looking?? Yuk. Boring and obnoxious. I'm done with Clancy. He should retire before Mr. Clark comes to put him out of his misery.
Rating:  Summary: Tom Clancy and Jack Ryan: The Seinfeld Years Review: Tom Clancy's faults as a writer are legion, including repetition, mangled grammar, upside down syntax and endless rhetorical questions ("But I was a bad writer... wasn't I?"). For the most part, though, there have been compensating pleasures, not the least of which are intriguing, multiple story lines that eventually (often too eventually) join somewhere in the middle of the book, at which point the reader, happily surprised, is hopelessly hooked. There are the insights into military technology, "spook" procedures and Weltpolitik, no matter how simplified. And, of course, there is the often compelling character of Jack Ryan.In "Red Rabbit," Clancy has managed to emphatically display all of his faults and none of his virtues (clearly there was no editing of Clancy's effort, but that is a problem common to all best-selling authors). I confess I read the book voraciously, waiting for the "good parts" (there were none) that are the inevitable reward for the patient Clancy reader -- even the lamentable "Rainbow Six" at least had John Clark and more than one good shoot 'em up). If "Seinfeld" is a show about nothing, but really isn't, "Red Rabbit" is a book about nothing, and really is. Ryan, the bedrock of Clancy's fiction (though we might sometimes wish Clark had that role), is vapid (can we care about any character who calls his wife "babe"?). The Foleys, so impressive in "Cardinal of the Kremlin," among other books, here have an invisible child addicted to "Transformer" video tapes (they're so proud) and are able to speak to one another via sign language in a dark bedroom (told you they were impressive). Our view of the demigods of the CIA -- Moore, Greer, Ritter -- make us wonder how quickly they can cash in on their pensions and leave the Agency to the tender mercies of those who are at least mildly incompetent. What is remarkable is that all of these characters have had proud moments in previous Clancy books -- no matter what the chronology of the "Adventures of Jack Ryan." Clancy's decision to return to Ryan's beginnings (minus "Patriot Games") was a good one. The demise of the Soviet Union has left him grasping for story lines, so why not go back to the future? But while he went back, he did not move forward. When Ian Fleming (who is frequently disrespected by Clancy) faced the same problem for James Bond, he replaced SMERSH with SPECTRE. Fleming was successful. Perhaps Clancy needs to revisit the Fleming books.
Rating:  Summary: Not up to the usual Clancy standards Review: At his best, Tom Clancy has written impossible-to-put down novels like 'Cardinal of the Kremlin', 'Clear and Present Danger', and 'Sum of All Fears'. These books showcased Clancy's ability to juggle multiple, often disparate plot threads, before bringing them together in an edge-of-your-seat denouement. Unfortunately for Clancy fans, 'Red Rabbit' represents a nadir in Clancy's career. Taking its plot from the loopy right-wing notion that the KGB conspired in the attempted assassination of the Pope in the early '80s, is the novel's major flaw. Since we already know how that turned out, much of the suspense that is a hallmark of Clancy's writing is absent. The story is told in four closely related plot threads: the Politburo's scheming, the defection of a KGB insider, the assistance of the Foleys in the defection, and Jack Ryan's behind the scenes analysis of the situation. Previous Clancy novels have built suspense and anticipation on Burns's principle of the best laid plans going astray. A tiny flaw in the plans of the Good Guys or the Bad Guys leads to major consequences. In 'Red Rabbit', this suspense never materializes. What should have been an exciting, final hundred pages describing the exfiltration of the KGB agent is instead a straightforward read in which everything goes according to plan. Apart from the agent, none of the principle characters are ever in danger; it's a bit like playing a video game in "god mode." Compounding this is a repetitiveness in Clancy's prose that quickly becomes annoying. We are told innumerable times that Jack's wife's job is "cutting eyeballs." Mary Pat's cover as a ditzy blonde is explained again and again. The bizarreness of the Hungarian language is discussed ad nauseum. The overall effect is that Clancy sketched out a plot, and had a team of ghost writers flesh out the details. Clearly a heavy-handed editor was needed to reign in this project. Alas, doing so would probably have cut a 618 page novel down to a concise, nonrepetitive 300-page effort that would be too atypical of the standard Clancy tome. Despite its repetitiveness, and a needless digression into the horrors of socialized medicine, it's still a good read. Clancy at his worst still exceeds lesser espionage writers. His descriptions of spy "tradecraft" are excellent, expanding on many of the descriptions of the superior 'Cardinal of the Kremlin'. Hard-core Clancy fans are sure to enjoy it, but for those new to Clancy's writing, one of his earlier novels would be a better choice.
Rating:  Summary: A great 250-page novel - too bad this one is 600 pages! Review: Tom Clancy had it all. His first four novels were terrific, and I literally stood in line to buy each new volume. Then, Mr. Clancy somehow made the grave mistake of believing he was above editing. His last four or five books are readable, but barely. Red Rabbit is unquestionably the most overwritten book I've ever read--which is to say Clancy could have used ten words when he used 40. Red Rabbit is WAY too long, and the plot drags along in places in a way I've never seen in a book from a major publishing company. The backstory on Jack Ryan should have been interesting, but this boring manuscript makes me seriously wonder why I would ever buy another Tom Clancy book again. If you love this author's early work, avoid this book--it will singlehandedly destroy the Jack Ryan franchise for you forever.
Rating:  Summary: Great read Review: I have to disagree with all these reviewers. I love this book. Filling in the blanks of what happened between Patriot Games and Hunt for Red October was a great idea, given that Jack Ryan in the present Clancy Universe is President. I find this book to be imaginitive, and a page turner. I just hope he gets back to John Clark again, I would love to read on some of his adventures in the cold war.
Rating:  Summary: Don't Bother Review: Tom Clancy missed the target on this one. It was slow, dull, predictable and too religeous. This book is one that, once you put it down, you don't want to pick it up again. Disappointing.
Rating:  Summary: Red Rabbit Review: Tom Clancy is past his prime. The character of Jack Ryan has only one place to go, and that is godhood. In the future, I'll wait a very long time before I jump into another Clancy novel.
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