Sorry for the time you’re going to lose watching this. It’s amazing. If you’re an uncouth, cultureless Philistine, please read this ASAP.
Sorry for the time you’re going to lose watching this. It’s amazing. If you’re an uncouth, cultureless Philistine, please read this ASAP.
#RESIST
Let's see. I think I... ah, yes. My copy from back when my age started with a "1" rather than a "5."
The cover's still nice, but the spine is beat to hell.
I'm a "7" compared to most gun-guys, which means I'm a "3" on P-F.
I read that in Korea 1986 on the DMZ whilst listening to Kim Il Sung rattle his saber.
I pulled an all nighter in college reading Red Storm Rising.
Recently re read it and it still delivers.
It's always been back and forth for me whether Red Storm Rising or The Hunt For Red October is Clancy's best book. Very cool to see Red Storm with the visuals!
Clancy owed a fair amount of Red Storm's battles to Larry Bond and a Harpoon campaign:
Used to spend a good chunk of time playing it myself with friends. Though there were computer versions later, we were doing it the old fashioned way back then: unit counters, and dice, and paper.
From the genre and time, also worth checking out is Team Yankee which is WW3 from the perspective of an Armor team.
As an afficianado of these sort of books, back then, I also always thought the biggest flaw was so many of them ended with "and then a miracle happened". An interesting counterpoint is Red Army. Written by an Army intelligence officer it's told from the Soviet point of view and doesn't let NATO off the hook so easily.
no one sees what's written on the spine of his own autobiography.
I love Michael Pritchard’s narration. He has read some great books, many in my audible library.
Heh... here's mine, also read countless times. There are lines from this I can quote from memory. Easily my favorite book of all time.
"The M1 tank had an engine governor that limited its speed to about 43 miles per hour. It was always the first thing the crews removed..."
My first Clancy novel also. Was traveling on a trip with my mother to Charleston South Carolina and just happened to see it in a bookstore. Was immediately hooked.
Still think it's the best of them all. It gives a more global picture of everything, not just focusing on the Navy, or one particular set of individuals.
The digital simulator visualization really helps bring the story alive.