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Dead Hand
 
 

Dead Hand (Mass Market Paperback)

by Harold Coyle (Author) "Unable to ignore the leg cramps that were reducing his pace to a painful limp, the solitary Welsh guardsman came to a complete stop ..." (more)
1.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 5.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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With occasional references to "the Kursk incident" and to Vladimir Putin's unpopularity with the Russian people, and with a plot centered around the antics of an ultra-nationalist Russian general, Dead Hand positions itself as an up-to-the-minute thriller with significant political resonance--and even throws in a natural disaster for good measure. Ever wary of being caught off-guard by a nuclear strike, Russia has carefully cultivated a retaliatory system capable of launching its own missiles: mordantly dubbed Dead Hand, the system will activate without a central command. When an asteroid hits Siberia with enough force to trigger the system, Moscow finds itself faced with both unspeakable environmental chaos and General Likatchev's bid to subvert the disaster to his own anti-Western purposes.

Politics makes strange bedfellows, and Russia must ask the U.S., NATO, and the French Foreign Legion (to name but a few of the players) to invade its own borders and destroy the missiles before Likatchev can get to them. Confronted by mass destruction and a Russian squadron led by one of the general's former protégés, the motley group of Western soldiers races against the clock toward the bevy of silos--but at what cost?

Harold Coyle is anything but subtle: his characters can't cross a room without the author pausing to reflect on the glory of the soldier's calling. His pedantic asides often bring the plot to a screeching halt, and he has an unfortunate tendency to present his characters in the manner of an announcer at a beauty pageant: heavy on the platitudes and light on meaningful revelation. That said, Coyle has built up a loyal following, and these readers will no doubt be pleased with the obvious au courant sincerity of his latest offering. --Kelly Flynn --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.



From Publishers Weekly

Never one to spare readers his personal insights into all things military, Coyle (God's Children; Team Yankee; etc.) goes overboard in this uneventful, didactic thriller about a NATO-led assault to destroy Russia's nuclear missile silos. The title refers to an automated Russian doomsday system designed to retaliate against a first strike, even if the country's whole population has been wiped out. NATO launches its raid after an enormous asteroid hits Siberia. The resulting shock waves, whose seismic signature is identical to that of a nuclear explosion, activate Dead Hand, bringing the world to the brink of a nuclear exchange. The person who now has his finger on the button is renegade Gen. Igor Likatchev, who views the situation as his opportunity to throw the country into such turmoil that it will allow him to stage a coup. Moscow, fearful that Likatchev may be crazy enough to activate Siberia's network of nuclear missiles, dispatches its own contingent of commandos to assassinate the exiled general. NATO forces, on the other hand, aim to destroy the missile silos, neutralizing Likatchev and disabling Russia's nuclear capability. Coyle, who usually delivers gritty, hard-driving (and bestselling) war novels, founders with his latest. A former army officer who spent 17 years on active duty, he shows a deep understanding of power politics and fighting techniques, but his exposition-heavy plot spends far too much time describing commandos readying themselves for battle, explaining military procedures and examining the specific qualities of the soldier mindset. When the action finally begins about two-thirds of the way through the book its course is predictable.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Unable to ignore the leg cramps that were reducing his pace to a painful limp, the solitary Welsh guardsman came to a complete stop. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
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4 star:
 (3)
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Average Customer Review
1.9 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars A Change in Approach, Sep 3 2003
By P. Connors "Colonialpara" (United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dead Hand (Mass Market Paperback)
Harold Coyle, VMI graduate and former armor officer in the US Army has written a group of novels that have captured the loyalty of many readers. I am among that group of loyal fans who seek out his books and then devour them as soon as I buy them. For the most part, I have always liked his story lines and the characters he creates. DEAD HAND, is another of those books that I enjoyed, but found flawed by the all too obvious technical errors that are included within the text.

As other reviewers here have noted, Coyle and his editors were delinquent in their fact-checking and this greatly diminished my enjoyment of the story. Continuing to place the SAS Headquarters of Hereford in Scotland is probably the most egregious error. Any soldier or hobbyist who knows anything about the SAS will note that mistake and snicker in derision.

Where Coyle does a great job with this story line is through the use of his imagination in creating a joint and multi-national force to solve the problem that serves as the plotline for the novel.

Basically, Russia, its central government severely weakened by corruption and the huge land mass of the old Soviet Union is faced with a huge dilemma. The first is that the central government must deal with a renegade general in Siberia who is in control and possession of several ICBM locations. While that is bad enough, the old Soviet government had built their missile fields with doomsday systems. Under the assumption that the Soviet government in Moscow might not survive a nuclear exchange with the USA and the UK, they installed "dead hand systems" in their strategic rocket forces. Designed to launch even without human intervention, they would destroy the United States and the West that had prevailed in a nuclear war, probably as the result of a first strike.

What creates the problem for the Russian government, the democracies in the West and for the men who must disarm this system is that the dead hand system works off seismic shocks. Originally engineered to launch as a result of the shocks that occurred as part of nuclear detonations elsewhere in Siberia, the system appears to have been activated as the result of the impact caused by a large meteor that has struck earth.

Knowing about the system and the renegade general has prompted western military planners to create a multi-national force of elite troops to disarm the most dangerous of the missile fields and the general commanding them. At the same time, the Russian government in Moscow has dispatched its own troops to terminate the general's command and return the missile field to government control.

Coyle does a fine job of building and developing each of the characters. He includes several from the 2eme Regiment Etranger Parachutiste (2eme REP), the 22nd SAS Regiment, US Army Special Forces and veterans of SPETSNAZ. These different military organizations ironically share a common mission and Coyle places a great deal of emphasis and descriptive narration on providing the reader with significant details of their planning, the parachute drops, their road marches and so on. In some cases though, the detail overwhelms the progress of the story and only serves to slow down the pacing of the plotline.

Because of his "padding" of details, this book does not read as quickly as Coyle's earlier efforts. In addition, there were sections where I was tempted to give up on the story altogether. I did not and read the novel to completion probably more out of curiosity to see how it ended and which characters survived.

Without giving away the ending, I think readers of this novel will be somewhat surprised by the approach Coyle uses in his final denouement. It is both unusual and effective and it leaves no doubt in the reader's mind that there has been a definitive final outcome.

While I cannot rave about this offering from Harold Coyle, I am glad I finished. I was dismayed at the factual errors, but at the same time found myself overlooking them as I sought to reach the ending. Suspense is sporadic, but the ending is well done. Mr. Coyle has departed from his formulaic retelling of the Dixon family saga with an up and down ride into the world of elite special ops troops. That makes the book worth investing some time with.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Not the Harold Coyle I Am Used To, May 1 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Dead Hand (Mass Market Paperback)
I have greatly enjoyed most of Coyle's books in the past, so I expected more of the same in this book. How wrong I was. The plot concept is ripe for quality action and writing, but Coyle instead spends more time waxing poetic about the philosophies of command and the ethos of combat. Of the 298 pages in the book, maybe 8 are vintage Coyle; the rest are drawn out editorials and dull character descriptions. There is next to no character development whatsoever; aside from their respective nationalities, each of the main characters is indistinguishable for the other. I honestly struggled to find the will to finish this book, and I agree with other reviewers that it appears that Coyle was either on a deadline or his new publishing house has an axe to grind.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Save your money, Feb 5 2003
By Jonathan A. Titus (Western USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dead Hand (Mass Market Paperback)
Not much of a plot, not much action.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars "Great Characters Make Up For Little Action"
This book didn't have the same amount of military action as other Coyle novels like "Team Yankee" or "Sword Point," but with all the great characters it didn't... Read more
Published on Jan 25 2003 by John J. Rust

1.0 out of 5 stars Is there an option for partial stars?
This could have been a very entertaining story if Mr. Coyle had refrained from spending half the book blatantly preaching about the nobility of the common soldier.
Published on Sep 12 2002

1.0 out of 5 stars Harold Coyle, where are you?
Being a big fan, I really looked forward to "Dead hand." Having read it, I have to ask, did Harold Coyle write it?

It is loaded with errors. Read more

Published on Aug 23 2002 by J. Rosser Bobbitt

2.0 out of 5 stars Great plot potential, but poor and choppy in its delivery
Harold Coyle has had a very good reputation in the technothriller genre for creating some masterful stories. Read more
Published on Aug 18 2002 by Jon Eric Davidson

1.0 out of 5 stars Goodbye Mr. Coyle
For years I have been an ardent fan of Mr. Coyles books. "Dead Hand" changed that right from the start. Read more
Published on Jul 16 2002 by Thomas Fischer

1.0 out of 5 stars Dismal
Absolutely dismal. Harold Coyle used to write the best soldiering books. But Dead Hand simply [stinks]. Read more
Published on Jul 14 2002

1.0 out of 5 stars An absolutely dreadful waste of time...
From factual errors concerning hardware (ex. PSM pistols and AK-74 rifles DO NOT use the same ammunition), to cliched characters, to a plot that seems to have been computer... Read more
Published on Jul 2 2002 by Joseph A. Demko

1.0 out of 5 stars Waste of my time
I wasted my time and my money by reading this book.
Published on Jun 3 2002

1.0 out of 5 stars Complete and Utter Rubbish
I wish Amazon would allow 0 stars, because this piece of junk (I am hesitant to call it a book) really deserves it. Read more
Published on May 26 2002 by A Friendly Shopper

1.0 out of 5 stars Dead Hand
NOTE TO FUTURE REVIEWERS: There are no excuses for giving this book more than one star. Save yourself some time; dont' read the book, but log on and give it one star.
Published on May 20 2002 by Spikenard

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