Tom Clancy
Rainbow Six
This book was published by G.P. Putnam's Sons in New York, USA.
Copyright date is 1998. There are 740 pages in this book.
Thomas L. Clancy, Jr. was born on the 12th of April 1947, he is married
and lives in Maryland, USA. Clancy's novels can be classified as
Military-Techno-Thrillers. He has written fiction and non-fiction books,
Rainbow Six is a fiction book. As for other titles, well there are just
to many to list, in total 23. Some books that he has written are The
Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games, Clear and Present Danger, to list a
few. According to Clancy "Rainbow Six, is one of my all time
favourites."
The book starts with a prologue that introduces us to the one main
character, John Clark, an ex-Navy SEAL, and two other characters,
Alistair Stanley the executive commander of Rainbow Six, and Domingo
(Ding) Chavez, the Captain of Team 2. There are two other insignificant
character introduced, Clark's wife Sandy and his daughter Patsy, who is
married to Ding. Patsy is pregnant. The other main character is Dmitriy
Arkadeyevich Popov, he is an ex-KGB agent who is now working as a
special consultant'. He will become very important later on in the
book.
Clark is the commander and in charge of starting a new European
anti-terrorist group called Rainbow Six. Rainbow Six is split into two
teams; Team 1 and Team 2. These teams are the best there is. They are
based in Hereford, England, but any European country can call on them at
any time. They run 3 miles in 20 minutes every morning at 6:00 am. Only
one team will be on-call at a time. The team that is not on-call will
be doing live fire practices. In the first 6 months of being in
operation they are called on three times which is a lot for this type of
thing. The first incident happens in a Swiss bank where terrorists have
taken control. They also have hostages. Team 2 successfully takes them
out, with only one hostage killed, but he is killed before they had
gotten there. The first mission helps them organize themselves and fix
a few holes in their planning.
The second mission is in Germany. An international trader is taken
hostage in his mansion/castle. This mission goes well too, thanks to
the snipers. No hostage deaths, but all the terrorists are killed.
After this mission is over they realize they should have a helicopter
Some of his other works include Fifty Years and Other Poems (1917) which was followed by his pioneering anthology Book of American Negro Poetry (1922) and books of American Negro Spirituals (1925, 1926), collaborations with his brother.
Truddi Chase’s narrative of her life written by her 92 personalities, the Troops, is a fantastic book that takes you on a ride through Chase’s mind from her past to present day where it's unfolding. In the book, Chase is thought to have a multiple personality disorder as a result from horrific, abusive, actions in the past brought on by her stepfather, Bill Milligan. The book is told by Chase’s personalities themselves as her therapist, Dr. Robert Phillips, interviews her daily and keeps logs and tries to find a solution so Chase can live her life normally. Being that the book was the first of its kind to be written about multiplicity, it sets the bar high for others to follow.
are the ones that he expresses the most. This book is a very colorful book in
The Hunt for Red October takes place during the Cold War, causing much distrust and deceit. Marko Alexandrovich Ramius, a Lithuanian submarine commander in the Soviet Navy and son of a prominent Soviet politician, intends to defect to the United States with his officers on board the experimental nuclear submarine Red October. The Red October is a Typhoon-class vessel equipped with a revolutionary stealth propulsion system that makes audio detection by sonar extremely difficult. Immediately evident to Jack Ryan, a high-level CIA analyst, and the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Red October is a strategic weapon that is capable of sneaking its way into American waters and launching nuclear missiles with little or no warning. The strategic value of Red October was apparent to Ramius, but other factors drove his decision to defect. His wife, Natalia, died at the hands of an incompetent doctor who went unpunished because he was the son of a Soviet political member. Her untimely death, combined with Ramius' long-standing dissatisfaction with the cruelty of Soviet rule and his fear of Red October's destabilizing effect on world affairs, ended his tolerance of the Soviet system.
Thomas Lanier Clancy was born on April 1947 at Baltimore, Maryland and grew up in a middle class Irish Catholic dominated neighborhood (Sharp 382). In his childhood years, Clancy was a voracious reader especially of science fiction and military adventure stories. After graduating from Loyola High School in Towson, Maryland in 1965, he joined Loyola College in Baltimore to study English Literature. He had hopes of becoming a writer, and he occasionally submitted short stories for publication, but they were never accepted.
Markus Zusak reads as, Death, he watches over everyone during the time of World War Two, taking souls when the time comes for them to be set free. He tells us a little inside scoop of what's going on in the destruction that was happening outside of Liesel's story.
Why is he significant? What books did he author - name two and their topics?
This book has taught me a lot about Alexander Hamilton. Most of it was a surprise to me. This book includes where he was born, how he moved to the United States, what he had done to contribute to the country, and his wife and kids. This book has plenty of insight on one of our greatest leaders.
of Wrath, Cannery Row, and Winter of Our Discontent for which he won a Nobel Prize.
In 1776, David McCullough gives a vivid portrayal of the Continental Army from October 1775 through January 1777, with sharp focus on the leadership of America’s greatest hero, George Washington. McCullough’s thesis is that had not the right man (George Washington) been leading the Continental Army in 1776, the American Revolution would have resulted in a vastly different outcome. He supports his argument with a critical analysis of Washington’s leadership during the period from the Siege of Boston, through the disastrous defense of New York City, the desperate yet, well ordered retreat through New Jersey against overwhelming odds, and concludes with the inspiring victories of Trenton and Princeton. By keeping his army intact and persevering through 1776, Washington demonstrated to the British Army that the Continental Army was not simply a gang of rabble, but a viable fighting force. Additionally, Mr. McCullough supports his premise that the key to the survival of the American Revolution was not in the defense of Boston, New York City, or any other vital terrain, but rather the survival of the Continental Army itself. A masterful piece of history, 1776 is not a dry retelling of the Revolutionary War, but a compelling character study of George Washington, as well as his key lieutenants, and his British adversaries, the most powerful Army in the 18th Century world. When I read this book, I went from a casual understanding of the hero George Washington to a more specific understanding of why Washington was quite literally the exact right man at the exact right place and time to enable the birth of the United States.
born in Portland, Marine on Sept 21, 1947. He was raised by his mother, Nellie Pillsbury,
novels. His mother read to him, at an early age, famous literature of the world
Black Hawk Down - Summary of the book as written by Mark Bowden. It was mid-afternoon on October 3, 1993. There were approximately 160 men eagerly awaiting the signal to proceed. Matt Eversmann sat waiting in Super Six Seven, a Black Hawk helicopter.
Novels, short stories, and essays. I've had 10 novels published so far. They are PATTERNMASTER, MIND OF MY MIND, SURVIVOR, KINDRED, WILD SEED, CLAY'S ARK, DAWN, ADULTHOOD RITES, IMAGO, and PARABLE OF THE SOWER. Doubleday published the first five originally. Warner has reprinted WILD SEED, MIND OFMYMIND, CLAY’S ARK, and PATTERNMASTER.
Here we discover that teams aren’t necessarily a Zion on earth and that the best teams are often constructed of diverse groups of people who may not have many similar characteristics.