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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Stephen Coonts flying high at a low altitude
The high point of "The Red Horseman" is the aerial dogfight between Jake Grafton (flying a Russian Su-25 "Frogfoot") and four Russian Su-27 "Flankers", with most of the action taking place below 200 ft. altitude! Stephen Coonts is very good at writing about this kind of combat, and you really feel that you're right there in the cockpit with Jake.

This book is...
Published on December 30, 2004 by Rennie Petersen

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but poorly written
I can't believe I made it through the book, this is the first book in a long time that I have been tempted to drop in the middle. The plot is very interesting and at times kept my attention. It also got more and more improbable as the plot grinded its gears through the book. Jake Grafton is apparently some kind of god and can do anything and go anywhere apparently...
Published on February 20, 2004 by leomontg


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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Stephen Coonts flying high at a low altitude, December 30, 2004
By 
Rennie Petersen (Copenhagen, Denmark) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The high point of "The Red Horseman" is the aerial dogfight between Jake Grafton (flying a Russian Su-25 "Frogfoot") and four Russian Su-27 "Flankers", with most of the action taking place below 200 ft. altitude! Stephen Coonts is very good at writing about this kind of combat, and you really feel that you're right there in the cockpit with Jake.

This book is the fifth or sixth (depending on how you number them) book in the Jake Grafton series. By now Stephen Coonts had established himself as a worthy competitor to Tom Clancy, and in my opinion his books are better than Clancy's. In particular, the characters in a Stephen Coonts book are real people, and people you enjoy learning more and more about.

In the first two-thirds of "The Red Horseman" the story unfolds slowly, but satisfactorily, as an international political thriller. Jake, now a Rear Admiral in the American Defense Intelligence Agency, is sent to Moscow to help monitor the Russian dismantling of their nuclear warheads. The CIA is also involved, but not in the way we would expect, and of course some warheads go missing.

The last third of the book becomes a techno-thriller. The hunt is on to retrieve the missing warheads and to ensure that no more will be stolen. In addition to the great dogfight mentioned above there is a very detailed description of how a major military operation to secure an enemy airfield would be done nowadays.

I found this last section of the book to be the most interesting and exciting part. The whole thing is rather unrealistic, but the reader is willing to ignore that because it's so exciting. Unfortunately, I thought that the ending was a bit too far out, and this is part of the reason for the lack of the fifth star.

Also on the negative side, I found Stephen Coonts opinion of post-glasnost Russia overly derogatory. He has his characters saying "nothing works here" and "Russia is on its way to the stone age" so many times it becomes silly. This is especially true with the hindsight we have now that Russia did survive the Yeltsin era and is slowly but surely becoming a developed country by western standards.

A very interesting sub-plot in "The Red Horseman" involves the death of a British newspaper mogul named Nigel Keren. Stephen Coonts has very clearly modeled Nigel Keren on the real-life Robert Maxwell. Even their dates of death are identical!

In conclusion, a very good techno-thriller, up to the usual Stephen Coonts standards. If you like military techno-thrillers with lots of political skullduggery, then this is for you.

Rennie Petersen
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but poorly written, February 20, 2004
By 
"leomontg" (Bremerton, WA USA) - See all my reviews
I can't believe I made it through the book, this is the first book in a long time that I have been tempted to drop in the middle. The plot is very interesting and at times kept my attention. It also got more and more improbable as the plot grinded its gears through the book. Jake Grafton is apparently some kind of god and can do anything and go anywhere apparently without authority from anyone else but himself. The book would have been alright if these were its only flaws, after all it is a novel and I expected to put my disbelief on hold while I read (not everyone can write like Clancy).

The major problem with the book is the writing. All the characters are extremely one dimensional except maybe Jack Yocke. The dialogue is awfully written and can't Coonts think of any other word for helicopter besides "machine"!? There were numerous plot holes, but I will concede that Coonts made an effort to fix them though somewhat lamely.

This book may be OK for people who have read the other books in the series and have already gotten used to the characters, but if this is going to be the only Coonts book you read, steer clear because it could be your last.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Implausible thriller, July 12, 2001
In "The Red Horsemen", Admiral Jake Grafton travels to post-Soviet Russia to monitor the dismantling of that country's nuclear arsenal. Stephen Coonts, Grafton's creator, brews up a tale of crooked Russians, homocidal CIA agents and black market nukes being sold amid the disintegration of Russia. Unfortunately, the story bogs down quickly when Grafton gets to Russia - mostly because the plot becomes overly complicated, but also due to the sheer implausibility that Coonts inserts into the story - like Grafton's single-handed destruction of a formation of highly agile Su-27 fighters while himslef flying only a hoggish Su-25; the novel's climax has the hero meet Saddam Hussein face-to-face and exact a measure of justice in an ending that seems incredibly pat for Coonts. Even that ending would seem worse had it not capped off a book full of plot twists that don't come together. Coonts' original "Flight of the Intruder" was a great book because it resisted the temptation to become the sort of technothriller that "Horseman" is. Instead, take out "Cuba" in which Coonts returns to form.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In a word, "WOW!", April 8, 1998
By A Customer
Jack Yocke wants to make his name big in the Washington Post as a top reporter. He found himself in Russia near a nuclear meltdown. Over a million dead to simply hide the fact of twenty thousand tactical nuclear weapons were missing.

Rear Admiral Jake Grafton, Deputy Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, is dispatched to Moscow. He and his team are to ensure that all the weapons are destroyed before they disappear into a Middle East terrorist pipeline. Grafton soon finds that some American officials want him to fail.

British billionaire Nigel Keren was murdered. His body was found floating in the sea near his yacht. Contacts in Israeli intelligence have proof he was actually the victim of a hit squad from WITHIN the CIA. Grafton soon knows way too much and has been targeted for assassination.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This one deserves 200 STARS!, September 27, 1998
Stephen Coonts's very best so far! A well-researched, fast-paced and easy-to-read thriller which deals with the story of a nuclear power plant explosion, caused by a renegade general intent on using the disaster to gain him access to a tactical nuclear weapons storage depot, to sell them to Saddam Hussein. Meanwhile, members of the CIA are dropping down like flies in a binary poisoning plot which claims the life of a British newspaper tycoon(a thinly fictionalised Robert Maxwell) and could have been lifted from THE X-FILES. The flying sequences are as ever, as brilliant as Dale Brown with all the autheticity and fully-explained technics you could want, and it's interesting to see Jake Grafton handle Russian fighters for a change! The final scenes in Saudi Arabia and Iraq provide an excellent backdrop to the mission to retrieve the stolen warheads, and the Moscow scenes are also authentic and well-researched. Once again, like Tom Clancy's CARDINAL OF THE KREMLIN, it brought back memories of my visit there. Well done Stephen Coonts, and an ideal starting point for those new to this excellent author's work!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not his best - but better than most., March 13, 2001
I'm a fan of Stephen Coonts, and look forward to every new release.

I snatched this up the moment I saw it in my bookshop, and it took me all of a day to read it.

Like all Mr Coonts' books, this is great fun. The Admiral allows himself to go completely O.T.T. at times, Toad rushes around, being horny and dreadfully in love, the bad guys are as cold and calculating as anything you're ever likely to read.. and hey, it's a good read.

Don't try to find too much in it - simply enjoy it. It's a very good addition to Jake Grafton's history, and everything works pretty well.

No, it's not Mr. Coonts' best. But then - his worst is a darn' sight better than the best of most of the writers who work in this genre.

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I knew you had it in you!, October 13, 1998
By A Customer
Stephen Coonts has really evolved with this novel. He has progressed from the plain men-in-war type thriller(Flight of the Intruder) to the true techno-thriller. This book ranks up there with books like Larry Bond's Red Phoenix and Tom Clancy's The Sum of All Fears. I usually don't like novels with real people in them(Boris Yeltsin and Saddam Hussein), but the Red Horseman does not exploit these people like some others(David Hagberg's Kilo Option, for example). This book kept me awake at night because it's so realistic. I'm glad Mr. Coonts has gone on to write other techno-thrillers as well(Fortunes of War). Congratulations, Mr. Coonts! I knew you could do it!
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Red Horseman, December 21, 2009
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It is true Coontz writting with the twists and turns at every page. Starts a little slow as does many of the Coontz novels but soon grabs you at a level that forces you to continue reading a not put the novel down. Highly recommend the entire series of books by Coontz and enjoy the thrill of Jake Grafton; Callie Crafton; Toad Tarkington; etc.
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3.0 out of 5 stars The Red Horseman (Book Reveiw), February 17, 2006
A Kid's Review
The Red Horseman (Book Review)

Nuclear warheads turn up missing. A British journalist is dead and it all is tied together somehow. The Cold War is in progress and someone in the Soviet Union and the C.I.A. are working together to transport warheads to the Middle East. Jake Grafton and Toad Tarkington are sent on a mission to find the warheads. C.I.A. agents visited both their houses and tell them not to go to Russia. Jake is now a target for terrorists everywhere. Apparently someone in the Middle East wants to have nuclear weapons. Jake thinks if the missiles are obtained by unfriendly Middle Eastern countries they would launch them towards America. Toad and Jake went to Russia on a mission to find the missing Warheads. They hire a hacker to assist them in locating the warheads. Meanwhile an American journalist named Jack Yocke is already in Russia and saw some Russians with machine guns gunned down a whole bunch of people. The weird thing was no police or any other agency responded after the shooting was over. Jack told Jake about the incident as soon as he arrived in Russia. Jake then told a Russian officer and he said he didn't know why the police didn't take action. Jake and Toad already thought Herb Tenney was behind the massacre and suggested to the police to arrest him. They went with the police to search Tenney's place. The search revealed strange tablets that may have made Jake sick at the party the other day. After Tenney is released he dusted his house for fingerprints and finds matches for Toad and Jake. Jake then learns Herb is up to something and it is related to the warheads. Jake finally learns the tactics of how to be a navy seal. He also learns how to skydive and most importantly fly a jet aircraft. His skills would later be put to the test when he gets in a dogfight with four Russian jets. He surprisingly makes it through without being killed. Jake finally finds the nuclear warheads. He figures out Saddam Hussein was behind all of it. I recommend this book to people who like techno-thrillers and mysteries. I also recommend it to people who are interested in the armed forces. This is a really great book and I enjoyed it a lot.

The best reason I liked this book was because of the non-stop action. In the beginning some C.I.A. agents went into Jake's and Toad's house. Jake fought back but the two C.I.A. agents overpowered him and threatened him. Toad was threatened but then Jake got his gun and scared them away. There was when the journalist saw the terrorist shooting and lived to tell the tale. The journalist even inspected the dead bodies without anybody noticing. Finally the best part in the whole book was the dogfight. I don't know how a person who just learned how to fly a jet can shoot down four planes all by himself but Jake managed to pull it off. It was unrealistic but it was very exciting to read in specific detail how Jake shot them down.

The second would have to be a lot of the events were explained in explicit detail. When Jake was first learning how to become a navy seal it told you how they drilled through the training and how perfectly he did it when he actually had to. The author told how unstable Jake's first flights were and how he struggled with getting it off the runway because he would either give too little power or too much. On his first flight I thought he was going to crash because in flight he couldn't stabilize the plane properly.

Last was when Jake was solving the mystery. It made it seem like you were the character in the book trying to figure out the mystery. The start of the mystery was very confusing because it had a whole bunch of names and sometimes I forgot some of them. Later in the problem it started to get very interesting because you could sense Jake getting closer because of all the events like General Brown dying, the shooting, etc.

Last was the book was unpredictable. When the journalist's body turned up in the ocean without any signs of drowning is one example of this. He probably wasn't drunk and records clarified that there were C.I.A. agents aboard. There was also a time when people Jake knew kept dying and you thought he was going to be next. For instance General Brown died of a heart attack because of the tablet with poison that Tenney gave him. That is how the British journalist died and even General Shmarov died all of a heart attack. For some reason Jake managed not to get poisoned which really surprised me. I would have never figured that Saddam was behind the entire problem. I thought it was going to be some random terrorist but it was a well known terrorist.

This book is for people in the armed forces and for people who like mystery/thriller books. Jake developed in many ways as a character. The book was unpredictable, had lots of detail, and lots of action. I really liked this book and this is one of the best books I read. Jake would have never survived without Toad by his side giving him advice. Toad didn't have to come to Russia but he did anyway to keep him company. The details made it seem as if you were the main character not Jake. The fight was explained in detail, the training, almost everything was explained in a lot of detail. The book was also like there was action on every single page and I never wanted to put the book down. The dogfight was too interesting for me to go and do something other than read.

By: D.Bennett
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good Book, great fun, January 22, 2003
By 
Evandro Souza (Curitiba, Brazil) - See all my reviews
This is a good book to read, the plot is ok, the thing that i dont like is that Jake Grafton in this book is almost like a superman, he can fly planes, well ok, but jumping with seals without like he was one for years is not very much real, and handle a squad of SU 27 Flankers with a single Su-25 frogfoot is almost impossible to happen .. i think this is the major faults in the book, the rest is ok .. one of the most improved chracters in this book is Jack Yocke, overall this book is very good to read and the history is well written
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