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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Plot  





2 Characters  



2.1  United States government  





2.2  United States military  





2.3  The Campus  





2.4  The British  





2.5  The Russians  





2.6  Other characters  







3 Release  





4 Reception  



4.1  Commercial  





4.2  Critical  







5 References  














Command Authority






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Command Authority
First edition cover
AuthorTom Clancy with Mark Greaney
Audio read byLou Diamond Phillips
LanguageEnglish
Series
  • Jack Ryan
  • The Campus
  • Genre
  • Military fiction
  • Spy fiction
  • Realistic fiction
  • PublisherG.P. Putnam's Sons

    Publication date

    December 3, 2013
    Publication placeUnited States
    Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback), Audio, eBook
    Pages736
    ISBN9780399160479
    Preceded byThreat Vector 
    Followed byFull Force and Effect 

    Command Authority is a techno-thriller novel, written by Tom Clancy and co-written with Mark Greaney, and published on December 3, 2013. It is Clancy's last major work of fiction and was released two months after his death. Set during the Cold War and after the events of Threat Vector (2012), the novel features President Jack Ryan and The Campus as they must deal with Russian dictator Valeri Volodin, a character widely noted as similar to real-life Russian president Vladimir Putin.[1] The book debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list.[2]

    Plot

    [edit]

    Former KGB officer Valeri Volodin becomes president of Russia. Openly critical of the United States, he secretly tasks Russian domestic intelligence (FSB) with staging false flag attacks in an effort to justify an invasion of Ukraine. A bomb is detonated in a restaurant in Russia, killing Russian foreign intelligence (SVR) head Stanislav Biryukov; simultaneously, former SVR head Sergey Golovko falls ill to polonium poisoning while visiting his old friend, President Jack Ryan, in the White House. Volodin accuses the US government of orchestrating the recent incidents, and then announces the merger of the SVR and the FSB into one entity led by Roman Talanov, the mysterious head of FSB.

    InSevastopol, a CIA special mission compound comes under attack from pro-Russia protesters aided by FSB proxy agents. Campus operatives John Clark, Domingo "Ding" Chavez, and Dominic "Dom" Caruso, who are on the ground in Ukraine to gather intelligence on Russian criminal organization Seven Strong Men and its head Gleb the Scar, take part in defending the compound in a tense battle between the protesters and Delta Force operators guarding the compound. Even though the compound's cover as a State Department facility was preserved, Volodin nevertheless decides to invade Ukraine, intent on pushing his troops all the way to the capital of Kyiv. President Ryan sends a few military troops to assist Ukrainian soldiers in the conflict with Russian forces as well as to prevent them from reaching Kyiv.

    Meanwhile, Jack Ryan Jr. has been distancing himself from The Campus after its breach by the Chinese a year ago by working in a corporate analysis company based in London. While investigating a case involving a large theft of money by Russian state-owned companies from British businessman Malcolm Galbraith, he is tasked by his father with finding out information about the codename "Bedrock" and its connection to a mysterious KGB assassin codenamed Zenith during the Cold War, amidst rumors that Talanov is the assassin in question. Even amongst attacks from Seven Strong Men thugs, Ryan Junior finds out that Bedrock is former MI5 "illegal" Victor Oxley, who was tasked by British intelligence with tracking down and eliminating Zenith, who is indeed Talanov. Oxley had crossed paths with his father, then a CIA analyst investigating the murders on behalf of British foreign intelligence, in West Berlin just before he got caught by the East German Stasi; he was then shipped off to the KGB and imprisoned in a gulag for years.

    When Ryan finds out that the Zenith affair was connected to his case involving Galbraith, he (along with Oxley and fellow Campus operatives Chavez, Caruso and Sam Driscoll) confronts his boss Hugh Castor in his chalet outside Zurich, Switzerland. Castor was revealed to be Oxley's former handler in British intelligence who had been doing business with Talanov for years in exchange for Oxley going off the grid. He also reveals that Talanov is essentially the leader of the Seven Strong Men (making him expendable to the criminal organization since he was KGB), and that Dmitri Nesterov is Gleb the Scar who is directly involved in Golovko's death. However, Spetsnaz forces sent by Talanov attack the chalet and kill Oxley and Castor. Ryan and his Campus operators manage to dispatch the attackers and flee the scene.

    Back in Kyiv, Clark, Chavez, Caruso, and Driscoll aid Delta Force operators in capturing Nesterov in the Seven Strong Men's heavily-guarded base of operations. Having been fully informed by his son, President Ryan talks to Volodin, demanding the halt of the Russian army's advance into Kyiv in exchange for Volodin not to be linked with the Seven Strong Men. Russia ceases operations in Ukraine and pulls back. Two days later, Talanov resigns from his position and is subsequently murdered by one of his own guards.

    Characters

    [edit]

    United States government

    [edit]

    United States military

    [edit]

    The Campus

    [edit]

    The British

    [edit]

    The Russians

    [edit]

    Other characters

    [edit]

    Release

    [edit]

    Command Authority was released two months after Clancy's death from an undisclosed illness. In a statement, Putnam president Ivan Held said: "Tom Clancy left us an incredible group of characters and a truly phenomenal record of fictional plots that sometimes preceded world events. Command Authority shows his characters in just the kind of dire world situation that Tom's fans came to expect. And of course we hope Jack Ryan and The Campus team can live on."[3] The Jack Ryan universe was later continued with the release of Support and Defend by Greaney in July 2014.

    A continuity error was shown when Stanislav Biryukov was mentioned as the head of Russian foreign intelligence (SVR); in previous novels he was featured as head of Russian domestic intelligence (FSB).

    Reception

    [edit]

    Commercial

    [edit]

    The book debuted at number one on the Hardcover Fiction category of the New York Times bestseller list for the week of December 22, 2013; in addition, it charted at number two on the Combined Print and E-Book Fiction category of the same list.[4] It also debuted at number three on USA Today's Best-Selling Books list for the week of December 12, 2013.[5]

    Critical

    [edit]

    The book received mostly positive reviews. Publishers Weekly noted it as "a classic spy novel", concluding: "Fans of extended combat sequences should look elsewhere, as the focus is on high stakes espionage and assassinations carried out in rented rooms and dark alleys, not well-lit battlefields."[6] Kirkus Reviews praised the "oddly timely" novel as "vintage Clancy" and "a pleasing fairytale for people who like things that blow up".[7] In a mixed review, Chicago Tribune dismissed the novel, adding: "The result of this stubborn granularity makes for a sometimes sluggish pace over the course of such a doorstop of a book, an all but fatal flaw in a genre that makes its living off compelling the reader to keep the pages turning."[8]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ Dugdale, John (20 March 2014). "Vladimir Putin's many faces, in fiction". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  • ^ "Hardcover Fiction Books - Best Sellers - December 22, 2013". The New York Times. Retrieved 12 December 2018.
  • ^ Minzesheimer, Bob. "Will Jack Ryan live on after Tom Clancy's death?". USA Today. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ "Combined Print & E-Book Fiction Books - Best Sellers - December 22, 2013". The New York Times. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ "Book Reviews and Best Selling Lists". USA Today. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ "Fiction Book Review: Command Authority by Tom Clancy with Mark Greaney". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ "COMMAND AUTHORITY by Tom Clancy, Mark Greaney". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ Nance, Kevin (12 December 2013). "Review: 'Command Authority' by Tom Clancy". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 20 December 2018.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Command_Authority&oldid=1235333451"

    Categories: 
    2013 American novels
    American thriller novels
    Techno-thriller novels
    Novels by Tom Clancy
    Ryanverse
    Novels published posthumously
    Novels set in Ukraine
    Novels set in Scotland
    Novels set in Switzerland
    G. P. Putnam's Sons books
    Hidden categories: 
    Articles with short description
    Short description matches Wikidata
     



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