Unabridged CDs - 8 CDs, 9 hours
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The global village--an intricately intertwined network of technology that binds together the world's economies, governments, and communication systems. So large, so vital--and so fragile. Now a sophisticated group is seeking to "disconnect the globe"--destroying computer grids, communications satellites, Internet cable centers, biotech firms. Hard to do? If only that were so.
Quickly, a dedicated team of men and women assembles to try to track the group down, searching through right-wing militias and Russian organized crime, Jihadist terrorists and enemy nation-states. But the attacks are coming more swiftly now, and growing in destructiveness. Soon, they will reach the breakpoint--and then there may be nothing anybody can do.
In an exclusive video message for Amazon.com customers, Richard Clarke introduces his new novel, and explains why, as he says, "sometimes you can tell more truth through fiction":
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Reviewers everywhere praised the suspense and pace of The Scorpion's Gate, the vivid depictions of war, espionage, and bureaucracy, but most of all they hailed its authenticity. "Unlike most novelists, the man has been there and done that," said The New York Times Book Review. "Some of us," added The Washington Post, "have learned to listen when Richard A. Clarke has something to say." And we'd better hope they're listening now. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
57 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating World View of Technology,
By
This review is from: Breakpoint (Hardcover)
Richard Clarke has just shot to the top of my list of people I'd love to interview. In only three books, one nonfiction and two fiction, he's grabbed my attention and paranoia about all the scientific and technological changes that are going on -- and that will be going on -- in the world.
BREAKPOINT isn't the best writing to hit fiction because there are writers who paint pictures and characters with words better, but there's no one I can think of who writes with the easy authority Clarke brings to his novel. The author has been involved in Washington politics since 1973, and been involved in the clandestine evolvement of scientific advances with DARPA and other think-tank institutes that work on defense technologies. The novel centers on a terrorist threat against the United States that starts with the destruction of communications nodes that allow the internet to work. With those avenues shut down, banking, investing, business dealings, and even political diplomacy get crippled in a matter of hours. Clarke points out how pervasive the emerging technology is, and how everyone seems to have integrated it into their lives. Presented even in fiction, this is truly scary stuff and I found myself thinking about the possibilities as much as the plot and characters. Two crack agents of the Intelligence Analysis Center are assigned to ferret out the truth. Although almost paper-thin characters, Jimmy Foley and Susan Connor pull the reader through the frantic chase for the truth behind the attacks. There's just enough insight behind the characters to flesh them out, but not get in the way of the plot. BREAKPOINT is about technology, not people, and Clarke keeps his focus sharply on delivering a summation of what's out there in the world that's just out of sight, and to what ends those things might go. The plot is straightforward, though there are enough surprises to keep the interest there, but Clarke's views on what's going to happen through the Transhumanist Movement and the overload of technology on old communications systems are the best. I found myself reading sections of the book over and over again, not concerning characters, action, or plot, but about the information Clarke deals out with the no-nonsense rapidity of a blackjack dealer. He shows you the cards, but you have to form your own opinion about what you think, though Clarke isn't shy about suggesting what you should pay attention to and probably think. Clarke is a writer a cut above most technology thriller writers. He's a man who has been behind the scenes and witnessed all of these things he writes about. There's a credibility there that I haven't found in anyone else's writing. And Clarke writes well enough that readers will understand easily what he's getting at. I'm looking forward to more. This isn't just entertainment. Clarke is providing and education as well. Read the book and prepare to learn a lot of scary information that's all true.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting Story,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Breakpoint (Hardcover)
I didn't read Clarke's earlier novel, but I found Breakpoint to be entertaining. I noticed some people complained about his writing style, and I admit it's not perfect, but I read a book for the story and the entertainment value. Breakpoint is indeed a very fast read, and I thought he did a great job tying in new and emerging technologies to create a story that is set in the future, but is imaginable. Will the book win a literary award? Not even close. Is the book entertaining? Absolutely. The characters are not deep, and you will not feel an emotional tie to them, but the pace is fast and the story is interesting.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Keep An Open Mind,
By
This review is from: Breakpoint (Hardcover)
Whether it's judging future applications of scientific advancements or determining whom our enemies are,
"Breakpoint" illustrates the need to not leap to erroneous conclusions. Rather, the meat of this novel is very good at stressing the axiom, "think before you act". The only faults I find have to do with cardboard characters and dialogue that sometimes reads like something from a "B" movie. However, it is the discussion and use of technology which saves the day.
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