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Night of the Hawk
  

Night of the Hawk (Audio Cassette)

by Dale Brown (Author), Joseph Campanella (Reader)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Product Details


Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Set in the immediate future, this blockbuster demonstrates the exciting possibilities open to the techno-thriller in a post-Soviet world. Lithuania, seeking to remove the last traces of Soviet rule, plans to get rid of a secret research facility where scientists have developed a Stealth-type bomber--with the involuntary aid of none other than David Luger, presumed killed in Flight of the Old Dog . Luger has instead been captured, brainwashed and given a new identity, but somehow he has retained his professional expertise. Informed of his survival, the U.S. government mounts a rescue. But Gen. Brad Elliott, who led the Old Dog mission, makes plans of his own involving the EB-42 Megafortress, with its bristling array of missiles and electronics. Then the two operations become entangled in a Lithuanian uprising and an invasion from neighboring Belarus. While the rescue subplot is neither credible nor necessary, and while the Old Dog's frequently recycled crew is becoming somewhat shopworn, the Lithuanian story line sets the stage for dramatic high-tech adventure.
Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From AudioFile

The U.S. Marines and Air Force drop a rescue team into conflict-torn Lithuania. Dale Brown's latest action and technology-packed thriller deserves better than this presentation. Campanella's voice is pleasing and listenable as the narrator. However, difficulties are immediately apparent in the dialogue. All American military personnel sound like John Wayne impersonators. The Russians voices are worse. Campanella keeps the storyline moving at a compelling pace, but this can't make up for the ludicrous dialogue. R.F.W. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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L'avis des consommateurs

8 évaluations
5 étoiles:
 (7)
4 étoiles:    (0)
3 étoiles:
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2 étoiles:    (0)
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4.8étoiles sur 5 (8 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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Commentaires client les plus utiles

 
5.0étoiles sur 5 The Best Military Aviation Thriller, Mai 28 2004
This review is from: Night Of The Hawk (Paperback)
'Night of the Hawk' was my second book I read on late 90s. Although it is a sequel strory from 'Flight of the Old Dog'. Brown has given me a view of cold-weather country in Balkans where I have never been there at all. I could feel the cold of the weather but the story even coldest and chilling! But also Brown's wrote a story about a new warfare in it...I really eager wanted to see the mysterious stealth plane. Brilliant Story and it's recommended for those who have a military aviation enthusiast.
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5.0étoiles sur 5 Thiller-Dale Brown at his best, Oct. 30 2003
Par Un client
This review is from: Night Of The Hawk (Paperback)
Dave Luger was listed as KIA five years ago. Now in this gripping novel it has been discovered that he has survived and is being held by the KGB. In Night of the Hawk a rescue mission unfolds trying bring Luger back into U.S custody. Dale Brown puts readers right into the action by giving them a third person omniscient view so that they can see the plot unfold from different points of view. He uses his knowledge of military technology to explain everything so that the readers will be pulled even further into his novel. He also tells how spies are converted into to being double agents so that people will understand why some people break. In one of the best shows of military writing Brown makes you want to keep reading his excellent book He combines action, drama, and technology into a whirlwind of word that are matched by few. What Tom Clancy did for the nave, Dale Brown has done for special force. He explains the HAWC air force base in Nevada and how they test new technology to improve America's fighting force. Brown uses characters for the first time instead of using previous character as the center of focus. He sums it up by bring it to a close with the U.S, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independent States to the brink of a nuclear was as missiles fly and soldiers march in what could become World War three. The U.S marines are pitted against Byelorussians force along with a mixture of fixer and rotor wing aircraft, armored personal carriers and tanks. The U.S is trying to achieve without being detected and blamed for cause trouble in NW Asia. Excellent book for all military fiction lover
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3.0étoiles sur 5 none-too shocking technothriller, Mai 11 2003
This review is from: Night Of The Hawk (Paperback)
Another epic technothriller of redundant proportions. "Hawk" follows the adventures of Pat Maclanahan and the crew of the "Old Dog" in post-Soviet Europe. Brown's novels circulate through several geo-political hot-spots (China, Iran and former east-bloc states). Here, the accent is on the Baltic states, upon which former soviet Russia (not "former" enough for Brown's liking) seeks to reassert her power. Lithuanians trying to remake their country must stand alone against the might of the Russian military. Meanwhile, Russian hardliners inside of Lithuania hope to bring the former east-bloc state into the Russian fold - apparently by creating an extensive laboratory called Fisikous that designs and builds high-tech weapons, including a stealthy strike-fighter designed by the captured American Dave Lugar and patterned along the same technology as the EB-52. As Russian aggression becomes more overt, American forces bolster a coalition of Turkish and Lithuanian warplanes to turn back the tide.

This was a peculiarly messy Brown novel, adding to the problems you normally run up against in his books. For one thing - what's it even about? The specter of a powerful post-Soviet Russia using its military to rebuild its Soviet-era supremacy isn't a new idea for Brown (or one he'll abandon - witness "Warrior Class"). There is no central threat that must be eliminated by a certain deadline, so there's no tension or any sense that the story is building to a climax the way "Storming Heaven" did. We're supposed to root for the brave Lithuanians who quickly become the "Davids" in a high-tech David-and-Goliath story, but when their leader reveals that he's training an army of warriors patterned after Lithuania's medieval knights, you wonder how loopy "David" can be while remaining the favored underdog. The subplot about wicked ex-Soviets designing and building high-tech weaponry ready for battle is ludicrous. As a former air warrior himself, Brown must appreciate that you need more than fancy computers to actually turn out a prototype airplane - let alone one that can integrate a complex weapons and sensors suite and take the punishment of combat. Furthermore, with the Soviet position as unpopular in Lithuania as Brown can make it, it's impossible to reasonably imagine what good these Soviet wannabes can expect from their gleaming weaponry. (You figure that the pricetag of any one of Fiskous's aircraft, these Russian hardliners could arm thousands of Russian convicts with assault rifles and RPG's and airdrop them into Lithuania). Instead, as if on an episode of "Airwolf", the bad guys decide to cast caution to the wind, and duke it out against the heroes in the air. It's almost as if the researchers of Fisikous are in another book entirely - while Europe struggles to throw off the yoke of the new Russia, these guys sit around their labs arguing about aerodynamics and radar cross-section. Ofcourse, Brown doesn't let the plotting get too far along (when it does, he quickly summarizes everything) before fast-forwarding to the action - which in "Hawk" alternate between air warfare scenes and blatant Clinton bashing (whether you loved the Clinton years or loved to hate the Clintons themselves, and unless you're a rabid basher of Billary, you're likely to find Brown's barbs gratuitous at best and outright malicious at worst).

The story's biggest weakness is meant to be its surprise - Dave Lugar returns! Feared dead when left behind at the end of the original "Flight of the Old Dog", we now know that he was "rescued" by the Russians, who brainwashed him into turning over America's deepest military aviation secrets. Somehow passed to Fisikous, he's become the unwitting creative genius behind its stealthy fighter. Unfortunately, Lugar's story is only one of many details from other Brown books to make an appearance here. Brown obviously likes the idea that he's created a continuum of characters whose lives are wider than the covers of any one of his books. Unfortunately, the characters are so one-note (Brown prefers to summarize them in miniature dossiers rather than develop them as organic characters) that any attention paid to their adventures in other books seems out of place and distracting. This creates an odd paradox: you've had to have read any of the other books to appreciate the significance of the references Brown makes to them, but "Hawk" so follows the formula of those older books without bringing anything new to the reader, that Browns fans will have the least fun reading this one. We still have overly exhaustive explanations of how new weapons are based on what's tried and true of existing technology, Brown's pilots still exchange extended long dialog while flying their high-performance aircraft into battle, Brown's villains (liberals, Russians and US Naval officers) continue to annoy, and Brown himself treats his stories as an opportunity to demonstrate everything he knows about the military - even when the plot or the need to develop it in get in the way. Whether Brown's details are even correct is a subject I'll save for "true brothers". Grasp of details, however, is not the same thing as making those details flesh out the story or even the scenes in which all of that technology comes to bear. Though by the end of "Hawk" you'll know what a radar-warning receiver sounds like, or what an EW display looks like, the thrill of flying in combat is missing - Brown neglected to give his characters enough feeling to convey the rigors of being shot at while flying at 600 mph. This is one of Brown's weaker books - fans should opt instead for "Skymasters" or "Battle Born".

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Commentaires client les plus récents

5.0étoiles sur 5 Best book in the world
When I first read Night of the Hawk it was a tattered old version my dad owned. Now I've read it 6 times and everytime it is better. Night of the Hawk RULES!!!!!!!
Publié le Juil 31 2001

5.0étoiles sur 5 Best book in the world
When I first read Night of the Hawk it was a tattered old version my dad owned. Now I've read it 6 times and everytime it is better. Night of the Hawk RULES!!!!!!!
Publié le Juil 31 2001

5.0étoiles sur 5 Starts off a little slow, but the end makes up for it!!!
After reading "Flight of the Old Dog" I had to read the sequel, and I was glad that I did. Read more
Publié le Sep 18 1999

5.0étoiles sur 5 Another winner from Dale Brown!
Absolutely brilliant and the action is intense! Lt. Col. David Luger was left for dead when the Old Dog B-52 escaped from Russia . . . Read more
Publié le Oct. 23 1998

5.0étoiles sur 5 SO GOOD I HAD TO READ AGAIN!!
This was the first book I read by Dale brown and immediately begged my dad for more of his books. (He had already gone through the Dale Brown syndrome of I read one now have... Read more
Publié le Oct. 16 1998 par Pvt. Aaron Hatch (aaronhatch@h...

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