Debt of Honor 1st (first) edition Text Only

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Danny Wilson says:

Debt of Honor Brings Realistic Action and Espionage Debt of Honor is a book by Tom Clancy about a war between Japan and the United States that starts over a trade disagreement. The turn of events that triggers the war are creatively thought out and frighteningly realistic. The book follows Jack Ryan as the President’s National Security Advisor as well as his colleagues John Clark and Ding Chavez in the CIA. The novel covers all aspects of the war with great detail and wit including the diplomacy, espionage, technology, politics, and…

Craig Wood says:

Clancy ponders the Japanese threat “Debt of Honor” is classic Clancy fare. The plot moves rapidly, skipping from place to place as our old friend Jack Ryan frets over a bevy of global crises. This time the threat comes from Japan, where a jingoistic industrialist plots to bring America to its knees, both economically and militarily. “Debt of Honor” is enjoyable enough to read. The action moves fast and the chapters are sliced into convenient, bite-sized portions. The book’s weakness, perhaps, is that the plot–and many of the…

Patrick Shepherd "hyperpat" says:

They Said It Couldn’t Happen Clancy has been writing the life history of Jack Ryan for many years. With each new book in the series, new aspects of Ryan are displayed, from his own internal doubts about the moral correctness of some of his actions to a dazzling display of competence in each endeavor that he attempts. Here we find Ryan involved, as a first order plot, in an economic war with Japan, waged with all the tools of modern electronic markets, where Ryan’s prior experience as a Wall Street analyst is useful,…

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