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Tom Clancy

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Trillipse | 06:13 Wed 07th Dec 2005 | Arts & Literature
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I recently read a novel by Tom Clancy - "Op Center".


I read it purely because I found it somewhere, and don't like to see books being discarded. When I ran out of things to read, I read this.


It was very, very badly written, and although vacuously involving, the plot really wasn't up to much either.


How come this stuff is popular - or is that a tautological question........?

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You're absolutely right, Trillipse! At last someone agrees with me that Clancy is utterly hopeless.
Here's how I think he writes his novels. He takes one of these little notebooks such as children learning French used to be given in order to make themselves a small dictionary. He writes the entire story in that and then says to himself, whilst looking at Sentence No 1: "Now, how can I expand that into a paragraph or - even better - a whole page?"
He then works his way thus through the tiny booklet until he's got a novel's-worth of words. They may end up very well researched during the process, but the vast bulk of what he discovers is totally irrelevant.


His books are rubbish!

It would depend on why you read at all. I read for several reasons, not all always the same ones. Usuall it is to escape and Mr Clancy helps that quite well where others might fail.
Not a fan of Mr Clancy: the one I read was far more interested in showing off how much research the author had done than telling a story (though I've enjoyed the movies). To be fair to him, though, aren't the "Ops Centre" novels written by someone else and just endorsed by TC?

Agree with LeMarchand. The Ops Centre books are a money-making venture on the back of Clancy's name.


As escapist thrillers, though, I quite like Clancy - you just have to immerse yourself in his world view and suspend all your normal critical (political) faculties. Cold-war spy thriller becomes a war-on-terror (yes, I know it's an abstract noun - how can you wage war on a noun?) and now the (former) President's son has become a semi-licenced hitman....


Now what about Martin Cruz-Smith? Is his latest Arkady Renko book worth reading (I've read the others)?

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perhaps i have been too ha(s)tily condemnative re: mr clancy?
I tried one of his novels, and it put me off reading any more. He is obviously popular - he gets his name over the titles on the covers, but what ever his appeal is, it didn't reach me at all.
I got stuck at Chicago O�Hare airport a few years back and the choice of books wasn�t too grand. I bought Patriot Games thinking it would be a good thriller. Now I haven�t seen the film but I think I�m right in saying that it isn�t Prince Charles and Di that feature in the film. Clancy�s depiction of Charles is hilarious! It was about 14 years ago I read the book so I hope I�ve remembered the right bit � at the end there is a boat chase and Prince Chuck is an all action hero. Spectacularly bad, in my opinion, but I still stand by what I�ve said on AB before � it�s better to read bad books than not read at all.
Life is too short to read bad books! Discard and find another. No one will shoot you if you don't finish something you are not enjoying.

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