Tsar: A Thriller |
| | | | Title: | Tsar: A Thriller | | Author: | Ted Bell | | Publisher: | Atria | | Type: | Book / Hardcover | | Publication Date: | 23 September, 2008 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 1416550402 / 9781416550402 | | List Price: | $26.95 | | You Save: | $6.47 | | Amazon Price: | $20.48 | |
This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $6.95. | The HTML code below can be pasted onto your web-site, your MySpace page, or blog - or any number of similar places - to create a link to this page: If, instead of a text link, you'd like to create a link to this page which will display the book cover, if it's available, then the code below will do exactly that:
Check for the same book at these other US book sites:
[ Abebooks ] [ Alibris ] [ Barnes & Noble ] [ Half.com ] [ Powells ] … or check UK bookstores | Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description
Swashbuckling counter Spy Alex Hawke returns in New York Times bestselling author Ted Bell's most explosive tale of international suspense to date. There dwells, somewhere in Russia, a man so powerful no one even knows his name. His existence is only speculated upon, only whispered about in American corridors of power and CIA strategy meetings. Though he is all but invisible, he is pulling strings -- and pulling them hard. For suddenly, Russia is a far, far more ominous threat than even the most hardened cold warriors ever thought possible. The Russians have their finger on the switch to the European economy and an eye on the American jugular. And, most importantly, they want to be made whole again. Should America interfere with Russia's plans to "reintegrate" her rogue states, well then, America will pay in blood. In Ted Bell's latest pulse-pounding and action-packed tour de force, Alex Hawke must face a global nightmare of epic proportions. As this political crisis plays out, Russia gains a new leader. Not just a president, but a new tsar, a signal to the world that the old, imperial Russia is back and plans to have her day. And in America, a mysterious killer, known only as Happy the Baker, brutally murders an innocent family and literally flattens the small Midwestern town they once called home. Just a taste, according to the new tsar, of what will happen if America does not back down. Onto this stage must step Alex Hawke, espionage agent extraordinaire and the only man, both Americans and the Brits agree, who can stop the absolute madness borne and bred inside the modern police state of Vladimir Putin's 'New Russia'.
| Other Items You May Enjoy: Browse Books From These Related Subjects: Customer Reviews:
Not His Best, But An Amazing Writer! 18 June, 2009 I LOVE Ted Bell's writing. I immensely enjoyed all the other books in this series - and I recommend reading them in order, although it is not necessary to enjoy them. Mr. Bell's writing is enthralling - his narratives provide a hint of the thought processes and personality behind each character. And his larger-than-life, james-bondish hero, Alex Hawke with his combination of 'little boy' and 'international spy' is a hero you can't help but love. Ok, so he performs miracles and is so rich that he can outspend the military weight of the world, but that is what we like to read, is it not? Who wants the typical hero? Mr. Bell challenges the reader and is obviously knowledgeable about the subjects he includes - or is at least a very good liar! Either way, his books have been a joy to read. This book, Tsar, is not his best. It starts very slow. The real action doesn't begin until the last 1/3 of the book. It was still enjoyable, knowing the characters as I do. The premise, as that of his other books, is terrifying and realistic because the reader can truly see the plot happening in real-life. This book brings back the 'Russia' of old - the one we all feared as children... and looks at the possibility of a renewed Soviet republic with its sights on the Eastern European countries it once possessed... as well as the United States. Alex Hawke, trying to hide from the world and take a break from spying, is pulled into the plot and along with his lovable, but fierce friends, cheats death while trying to save the world from the new Tsar of Russia. Overall a great book, even though it starts a little slow. This book has a little more sexual content than the others.
- Reviewed by customer ID: AQL56WJ0XCCC7
Yawner 28 May, 2009 I couldn't get past the first couple of cheesily written cookie-cutter spy novel chapters.
I fail to finish very few books, but I couldn't stay awake for more than a page at a time. There was no reason to turn a page and I love the genre.
Maybe it got better later on and if I'm stuck on a desert island with it and a Wheaties box, I'll read it 2nd.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A33REC3J2JU2EL
I Loved The First Three Books, Was Tepid On The Fourth.... 28 May, 2009 ...I have been reading it for over a month now - hoping it will grab my interest, but so far not. Hawke is a 007 wannabe, but he doesn't have the class. He is a gigolo - he has become a cardboard cut out character. Ambrose still rocks. Stokely is cool. Pippa and Conche are jokes. Actually, all the women in the book are bad, poorly written. Sad, I had such hope. Now I don't know if I should sell the book or burn it and spare the world one copy of this atrocity.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A37523RKDD4JVX
Thriller With Too Much Filler 12 June, 2009 OK. I know you can't have heart-pumping non-stop action for 486 pages. No need. But...come on, give me less pages, less gratuitous you-know-what and this would be a great read.
I got this for a good summer book by the pool, but it took five tries, over two months, to get past the first 150 pages. People I trust in the national media mentioned the book, so I was eager to jump in. Russia has always fascinated me. But the book didn't until about half-way through. The last 100 pages were riveting.
Could the Cold War come back? It's an interesting story with plenty of CIA bravado, unlikely scenarios with a few pretty good page-turning action scenes. I've read every Tom Clancy novel, plus I love John Grisham's stuff. This is the first Ted Bell novel I've read. Also my last.
- Reviewed by customer ID: ASA4IINUZV05G
Spoiler Alert 26 May, 2009 Please don't read this if you don't want spoilers.
The book was ok in my opinion but there were certain parts that made absolutely no sense to me at all.
1] In the climatic scene, the hero is attempting to save his beloved from her father (the baddie). He decides to rush a house filled with armed guards with a handgun. His sidekick stays behind with an automatic machine gun. He has a machine that will blow up the bad guy and he has to detonate it before the bad guy can blow up an American city. He can't supply suppressing fire for the hero because it is too dangerous and it is of paramount importance that he stays alive to blow up the bad guy. There is of course no logical reason that he can't at least give the hero the machine gun to give him a chance. The hero gets close to the house before being gunned down and lays motionless on the ground. The sidekick who thought it was too dangerous to provide suppressing fire now thinks it is a good idea to run out in the middle of the field in an attempt to save the hero who's probably dead anyways (screw the city or killing the bad guy). He proceeds to do so, mowing down the opposition like a lawnmower. Apparently the bad guys are terrible shots because the hero survives. If I were the hero and the person I loved was in danger, I think I would have taken the machine gun.
2. The hero's love is free to go anywhere she wants throughout most of the book. She is portrayed as woman who does what she wants where she wants throughout the book. In the end, when it is of paramount importance that she be anywhere that her father isn't, she suddenly is welded to him like glue, powerless to get away. It didn't make alot of sense to me other than it was guaranteed way to make sure she didn't survive. I pretty much knew she was doomed when they fell in love. It would have been difficult writing stories with her hanging around the hero's neck. Romances are exciting, marriages not so much.
3. The hero finds some thugs torturing his friends. He could just waste the thug but sets up a boxing match instead. That just didn't make a lot of sense to me. I can't imagine any professional spy doing something so silly.
4. One of the baddies has an opportunity to whack the only two witnesses to his crime (blowing up a city). This baddie whacked more people in the book than anybody. He decides to let the two witnesses go because he couldn't think of a good reason to kill them. They of course turn right around and their information is used to foil the grand plan of the evil doer. This same bad guy felt it was necessary to kill two children, rape and murder their mother, kill their father, etc... He is supposed to be the "elite" russian killer. For somebody "elite", this idiot isn't half as smart as me. Somewhat laughably, this "elite" killer and two of his cronies are taken out by a common female pop singer. In what world are Russian mobsters wimpier than divas?
There were other incidents like this throughout the book. People doing things that I couldn't imagine actual people doing.
I didn't mind the book, I would have liked more realism on the part of the characters.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A9C16ZO2PELNM
|