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Ordenes Ejecutivas (Jack Ryan, #8)

Ordenes Ejecutivas (Jack Ryan, #8)

Tom Clancy

4.12
53,859 valoraciones·906 reseñas

El Presidente ha muerto, y el peso del mundo recae sobre los hombros de Jack Ryan en la novela más impactante de Tom Clancy. ¿Qué hago? ¿Dónde está el manual para este trabajo? ¿A quién pregunto? 'Deuda de Honor' terminó con una impactante conclusión: una sesión conjunta del Congreso destruida, el P...

páginas
1273
Format
Paperback
Publicado
1998-01-01
Editorial
HarperCollins
ISBN
9780006479758

Sobre el autor

Tom Clancy
Tom Clancy

991 libros · 0 seguidores

Thomas Leo Clancy Jr. was an American novelist and military-political thriller pioneer. Raised in a middle-class Irish-American family, he developed an early fascination with military history. Despite initially studying physics at Loyola College, he switched to English literature, graduating in 1969 with a modest GPA....

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Calificación y Reseña

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Reseñas de la comunidad

906 reseñas
4.1
53,859 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
BC
Brett C·6 years ago
I enjoyed this one. Jack Ryan becoming the president after a terrorist attack and the story takes off. My only gripe was the book was very long. I think it could have been cut down by several hundred pages...maybe even 600 or so.
Jim C
Jim C·6 years ago
This picks up right from the ending point of the last book. One really needs to read that book before this one. Jack is now president of the country after the devastating events that hit the country. Is he ready for it as domestic people and leaders of foreign countries question his leadership and test him.This one is a little long as it is over thirteen hundred pages. That being said I was never bored with it and there were definitely times where I was emotional. One of the aspects I like about...
Shane Phillips
Shane Phillips·8 years ago
I could not finish this book. 12 hours into the audiobook and I could take no more. I guess I am just not a fan of Clancy’s writing. Such quotes as “he loaded the papers into his briefcase, most of them were useless” and a 13 minute diatribe on what secret service agents are thinking. I bet you could edit out 30% of this book and still get the story across.
Stewart Sternberg
Stewart Sternberg·8 years ago
Tom Clancy believes in flat tax, military growth, keeping the judiciary constructionist, limited government, and reeling in a destructive liberal media.How do I know this? Clancy spends pages on boring polemic doing his best Ayn Rand impression. What a sludge! Oh, and this over thousand pages of text features an absurd number of characters and enough plots to choke Godzilla. There's an attempt on kidnapping his daughter, an attempt by Iran to take over Saudi Arabia, a case of weaponized Ebola, a...
Matthew
Matthew·13 years ago
This was a 1358 page book - but it never felt slow and I was enthralled throughout.

While sometimes Clancy's military maneuver segments were a bit over my head, they were interspersed with enough other action to keep it moving.

A big thing I noticed about this book is that even though it was written in 1996, Clancy had a few plot lines that seemed like Nostradamus-esque foreshadowing to 20 years later.
Christopher Slater
Christopher Slater·13 years ago
This book is the pinnacle of the Jack Ryan series of novels. We finally see Jack Ryan, reluctantly and tragically, become President of the United States. He hates it, and sees it as a curse. The problem is that he is good at it. The very fact that he doesn't want to be there makes him all the more appealing to the voters in the book and to the reader. Of course, his reluctance is seen as weakness by other world leaders, and some try to take advantage of the situation. Their mistake. This book ta...
Jerome Otte
Jerome Otte·13 years ago
Jack Ryan and Tom Clancy may have reached their pinnacle of achievement with this book. However, this book is definitely not the place to start the series; as a minimum, The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games, and Debt of Honor should definitely be read before this book.Jack, due to the events detailed in Debt of Honor, suddenly finds himself President of the U.S., a position which he never aspired to and in which he feels decidedly uncomfortable. But, good former Marine that he is, he quickly ...
Rosalind
Rosalind·15 years ago
Reading this was entirely an exercise in reading something that lies way outside my comfort zone. Why is it outside my comfort zone? Well, it's not aimed at me for a start; I'm a woman, and I'm not American. I knew what I was taking on; it's a thriller, by a mega-bestselling author who specialises in a particular kind of macho, flag-waving, Budweiser-swilling, big-dick, patriotic, all-action Americana. There's nothing wrong with that, of course, if the writing's good and knowing that I had every...
Paul Hollis
Paul Hollis·16 years ago
1358 pages yes 1358 of Tom Clancy and now the nightmare is finally over!! This book took me a year to read, not because of its length but because it's incredibly boring for loooong stretches, I would set it aside for months at a time. The beginning was good and the ending (the last 300 pages was gripping) but to get there you have to get through a 1000 pages of of the main character Jack Ryan, now president, whining and complaning about being president and the political process(if there was ever...
Brett
Brett·16 years ago
This book is a serious contender for worst book I have ever read that is not by Dean Koontz. It is an excrutiating almost 1400 pages of awful dialogue, shocking misunderstanding of politics, simplification of international affairs, right-wing propaganda, and the utter ruination of a once enjoyable, if kind of silly, character--Jack Ryan.Maybe back in 1996, some people could be fooled by Clancy's ideas, but after the disasterous presidency of George Bush Jr., whose policies and thought process ar...