Separation Of Power
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Product Description
CIA director Thomas Stansfield is dead — and many individuals in the nation’s capital are pleased to hear. But, their happiness is fleeting-lived because Stansfield’s successor — his protégé Dr. Irene Kennedy — plans on pursuing Stansfield’s goals — a fact Stansfield’s fiercest enemies refuse to accept.
Israel has learned that Saddam Hussein is close to entering the nuclear arms race — and they’ve vowed to stop the Iraqi madman before he can get his hands on the essential weapon. With the Middle East teetering on the precipice of chaos and hurt, the president of the United States is forced to act.
The commander in chief’s secret weapon? None additional than the CIA’s top counterterroism operative, Mitch Rapp. With the haunting specter of World War III looming, Rapp races against time and impossible odds — navigating the deadly alleys of Baghdad, tearing through the corruption-riddled streets of Washing ton, D.C., and taking drastic measures against anyone who gets in his way.
With action that sizzles and right-to-life insider detail, Separation of Power showcases New York Times bestselling leader Vince Flynn at his shell-shocking best.
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I read seperation of power in a week, I dusted it of my aunts shelf and thought
“Well im already bored as hell, I got to at least trie to combat it”
I read the first few pages, thought it seemed remotely appealing. But I establish the writing to be stale and the plot honestly predictable. the characters were to action hero for me, I prefer nice and realistic chracters…which is something you will not find in this book. I also establish me fervently disliking the C.I.A more then I already do, there even more ruthless then I had previously thought.
I establish my self wanting the supposed terrible guy Hank Clark to achive his goal in the book. But this is just my opinion, if you do in fact like sabatoge and spie novels then im sure you would delight in this, but if you like poetic wrting or un predicatable and suspenfull novels this is not for you, it tries to hard but just fails. But if you like I had said delight in spie novels, then you might want to check this out,
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
After a downer of a start in “Term Limits”, Vince Flynn has launched on a series of books whose titles derive from poli sci terminology. “Term Limits” was a perplexing mixture of levelheaded political thriller aimed at the Clancy readerbase and pipe dream of all the anti-government weenies. Fortunately, Flynn settled down a bit in the next two (“Third Option” and “Transfer Of Power”) and chose to just tell the tale. But now I’m beginning to marvel if maybe Flynn was waiting until he bought a bit more polish before he got back to using entertainment as a tough pulpit. In this one, Saddam Hussein has gotten nukes and live-in tech support from North Korea. It would be a bit of a reach, were it not for the fact that there’s ironic precedent for such states throughout recent history to buy weapons from the athiest Reds to wage war against additional believers in the One God. But American satellite reconaissance spots the fact that there’s a nuke bunker beneath a major Bhagdad hospital. To just flatten the place with a spread of Tomahawks would only play into the hands of persons who call us “The Fantastic Satan”. So they send in Mitch Rapp–a hero that’s not in the James Bond or Jack Ryan league by a long shot but is engaging enough in his own way–with a commando squad. Meanwhile, Mitch’s boss Irene Kennedy is about to go before Congress to be confirmed as the new CIA chief, succeeding the recently deceased Stansfield. The political infighting that accompanies this is the type you permanently hear the crowd who use the term “goverment” as a four-letter vulgarism (“G-O-V-T”) claims to be prevalent in Washington to the exclusion of statesmanship. An proud blowhard congressman from the President’s own party has a personal animosity against Kennedy–he not only doesn’t want her in charge of the CIA, he wants her in jail. Never mind that he’s one of persons people who wants the Agency disbanded anyway. For some weird reason, Flynn has a WW II generation guy using Boomer generation slang (??). And the dude’s backed and secretly bankrolled by a sneaky senator from the additional party who’s the type to shake your hand with one hand and knife you in the back with the additional. Are you kidding or what? Maybe I’m a dinosaur, but early this month I stepped behind a curtain and pulled down some levers as my way of expressing my desires for my country. To me, people who just mouth off about how they can’t stand their government aren’t that different from persons who go off and sulk by themselves. Of course it can’t have occurred to this bunch that dysfunctional government in a democracy is usually due to an immature electorate. Single-issue and special interest candidates get nominated by single-issue and special interest voters. Just how mature is the impulse to place 100% of the blame elsewhere, huh? I don’t know–maybe we should be thankful that Flynn doesn’t drown us in Jeffersonian metaphor the way a less skillful writer would. A lot of anti-G flakes I know do that when the only Jefferson they really know anything about is a certain sitcom businessman who calls his wife “Wezie”.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5
How many times does a reader of a spy/thriller novel want to read the bickering between fiancees? Maybe once or twice, but this was way over the top. Unrealistic “domestic” dialogue hampers down this tale and adds an air of unreality to an already improbable plot. I read this because I was blown away with Vince’s “Transfer of Power;” thought it was a fantastic book. Boy…was this a disappointment.
Reader’s Rating: 2 / 5
This was my first Flynn book and I was completely blown away. Mitch Rapp is the is the Ray Lewis of terrorist asskickers. He reminds me of Jack in “24″. Flynn doesn’t place the reader pissed off at the end. The terrible dudes get what’s coming to them everytime and in the most satisfying of fashion. Awesome from start to end.
If you like political thrillers or spy novels READ THIS BOOK!!!
If you don’t like excellent books such as political thrillers and spy novels then go take your smelly, hairy, hippy ass and go sit on a stump and read The Five People You Meet in Heaven and take a grilled cheese with ya (and maybe some yogurt with granola). I hear PETA is hiring, maybe you can get a dang job!
Mitch Rapp eats hippies for breakfast and poops them out at lunch.
Peace out.
Reader’s Rating: 5 / 5
1. Vince Flynn suffers from the fact that since most of his books are consistently excellent, one then expects that all of his books will be brilliant.
2. This book is one of the subpar Vince Flynn books; ie it’s still “ok”, but not fantastic. The main problem I have with this book is the 2-3 different tale lines, which in the end, never merge with each additional. Perhaps it’s a stylistic thing, but it’s not my cup of tea. I just find that kind of writing, distracting and at worst, it seems as if the leader is just trying to make more pages lacking adding anything to the core tale.
Reader’s Rating: 3 / 5