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2.0 out of 5 stars
Desperation fueled this read, don't let it happen to you..!, Feb 8 2004
I was in a rut, hadn't read anything light in awhile. I mean, after you read "Gravity's Rainbow" and "The Enormous Room", a 300+ page diversion is almost welcome. I browsed, read a few page blurbs, and settled on an author I hadn't seen before, Dale Brown.I knew there was a reason I didn't trust the NY Times. Bad book reviews. This book is essentially a 12 year-old military schoolkid's fantasy: going off to wage war against the bad guys singlehandedly. It's actually a better book in 2004 than in 1987, since I can amuse myself with how ironic some of the premises are today: the Soviets building a ground-based laser to shoot down planes, missles, satellites, and probably sparrows. The editors must've drawn the line at sparrows, but they left in the hot woman tech who wants to be treated as an equal, the gruff superior officer who's really a good guy, and a handful of other assorted types that every techothriller needed back then. Character development? Ah, that's a negative. Lots of technology and insider jargon to make it realistic? Check. Lots of political insight, some plot twists? Ah, that's a negative. I mean, he named the enemy pilot "Yuri". I guess the editors crosshatched "Ivan". Yes, I picked up "crosshatched" from this book, so it got a second-star for augmenting my lexicon of useless jargon. And yet, I raced through the book. I didn't want to read it, but I had to finish it because I've only refused to finish two books in my life (and I couldn't recall them if you held me at gunpoint). I got through it, but now I'll never get that time back. I'm a little bitter about it, but I'll get past it. The point here, and let's not lose sight of this point while I still have it, is that this book should not be purchased by people unless they absolutely *must* divert themselves for a few hours. If you read it at the library, I suppose that's all right. If you borrow it from a friend and don't return it, you're probably doing that friend a big favor. Actually, I think that's it: someone borrow this book from me, and don't give it back. Fred
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