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Jack Ryan Universe (Publication Order) #7-12

Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12

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Six Jack Ryan novels from #1 New York Times bestselling author Tom Clancy, the the undisputed master of the techno-thriller.DEBT OF HONOREXECUTIVE ORDERSRAINBOW SIXTHE BEAR AND THE DRAGONRED RABBITTHE TEETH OF THE TIGER "This man can tell a story."—St. Louis Post-Dispatch

5514 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 29, 2010

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About the author

Tom Clancy

811 books8,110 followers
Tom Clancy was an English major at Baltimore’s Loyola College. As a Maryland insurance broker with a passion for naval history, his dream of writing a novel came true with his first effort, The Hunt for Red October (1984).

He wrote more than a dozen novels, which have a blend of realism and authenticity, intricate plotting, and razor-sharp suspense. Ten of the novels, including The Teeth of the Tiger (Berkley, 2004), feature the character Jack Ryan, former stock broker and CIA employee.

Clancy’s non-fiction works include a series of guided tours of America’s warfighting assets, Submarine, Armored Cav, Fighter Wing, Marine, and Airborne.

He lived in Maryland.

The following are the books and approximate time frame in the Jack Ryan Universe

Without Remorse 1969-73
Patriot Games 1981-82
Red Rabbit 1982
The Hunt for Red October 1984
The Cardinal of the Kremlin 1986
Clear and Present Danger 1988
The Sum of All Fears 1990-91
Debt of Honor 1995-96
Executive Orders 1996
Rainbow Six 1999-2000
The Bear and the Dragon 2002
The Teeth of the Tiger 2006
Dead or Alive 2007
Locked On 2007
Threat Vector 2009
Command Authority 2013
Support and Defend 2014
Full Force and Effect 2014

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
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5,715 reviews70 followers
October 7, 2018
Tom Clancy books were a familiar fixture in our household when I was growing up, and as I grew older and went looking for more ‘interesting’ things to read, Mr. Clancy was amongst the first ‘adult’ reads that I gravitated to. I read everything he had written up to that point, and then through the years I kept up with each new release. It has been many years since I last read the series as a whole, but over the past few months have found myself exploring them again.
My mother has been in and out of hospital over the past 6 months- and being an avid reader, I gave her a Kindle so she would have something to read while she was recuperating. Mum loves Tom Clancy, he’s among her favourite authors, so I suggested reading this series as a buddy read- but, on the days she isn’t well enough to read for herself, I read them to her. We love to discuss the details of the books after each read and even though we’ve both read the series before, it has been just as enjoyable this time around. It’s also been a great bonding experience for us, and we have really enjoyed revisiting Mr. Clancy’s work.
Jack Ryan is an analyst for the CIA and even though he isn’t the typical James Bond type action hero, he’s just as successful. Jack is more the outsmart/out think the enemy type of hero and the situations he finds himself in are quite compelling to read. I love all the different Jack Ryan stories- they all manage to keep me interested in what is going on and completely invested in the outcome. There is always intrigue, suspense, a little mystery, drama, interesting and fully realised characters, a complex and well-developed plot with clever twists- which all blend together to produce a memorable read.
I can always count on Mr. Clancy and Jack Ryan to take me on an adventure that never gets old, no matter the situations or how many times I’ve read these books.
12 reviews
October 22, 2017
I borrowed this as an ebook from my local library. the 1st time I did so. I was only actually interested in red rabbit. it read like any other Clancy novel with intricate details as to the mindset of characters. but the story drug on as though it ought to of ended a hundred pages ago, but the author, maybe the publisher, wouldn't let it do so, as though the reputation of the length of his other books would be damaged by this one being shorter then the rest. it did fill in several holes in the charter biographies of ryan, greer, ritter, cathy, AND THE kids. it places in cronilogical order. I've read several of the books, hunt for red October, patriot games. red storm rising was the best. the movies made to his novels take to much artistic liberty with the story. the cronilogical order is by no means attempted at in the movies.
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