The President is dead -- and the weight, literally, of the
world falls on Jack Ryan's shoulders, in Tom Clancy's newest and most
extraordinary novel.
I don't know what to do. Where's the manual, the
training course, for the job?
Whom do I ask? Where
do I go?
Debt of Honor ended with Tom Clancy's most
shocking conclusion ever: a joint session of Congress destroyed, the
President dead, most of the Cabinet and the Congress dead, the Supreme
Court and Joint Chiefs likewise.
Dazed and confused, the man who only minutes before had been
confirmed as the new Vice-President of the United States is told that
he is now President.
President John Patrick Ryan.
And that is where Executive Orders begins. Ryan had agreed to accept
the vice-presidency only as caretaker for a year, and now, suddenly, an
incalculable weight has fallen on his shoulders. How do you run a
government without a government?
Where do you even begin?
With stunning force, Ryan's responsibilities crush in on him. He must calm an anxious
and grieving nation, allay the skepticism of the world's leaders,
conduct a swift investigation of the tragedy, and arrange a massive
state funeral -- all while attempting to reconstitute a Cabinet and a
Congress with the greatest possible speed.
But that is not all.
Many eyes are on him now, and many of them are unfriendly. In Beijing, Tehran, and
other world capitals, including Washington, D.C., there are those eager
to take advantage where they may, some of whom bear a deep animus
toward the United States -- some of whom, from Ryan's past, harbor
intense animosity toward the new President himself. Soon they will begin to
move on their opportunities; soon they will present Jack Ryan with a
crisis so great even he cannot imagine it.
Tom Clancy has written remarkable novels before, but
nothing comparable to the timeliness and drama of Executive Orders. Filled with the
exceptional realism and intricate plotting that are his hallmarks, it
attests to the words of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch: "This man
can tell a story."
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