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Robert Ludlum's The Altman Code: A Covert-One Novel
 
 
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Robert Ludlum's The Altman Code: A Covert-One Novel [Paperback]

Robert Ludlum (Author), Gayle Lynds (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Thrilling New Novel in the Bestselling Covert-One Series June 17, 2003
New York Times Bestselling Series

For three decades, Robert Ludlum’s bestselling novels have set the standard in almost every country in the world against which all other novels of international intrigue are measured. Now comes the latest volume in the series of novels featuring Robert Ludlum’s Covert-One

In the middle of the night, on the dark waterside docks of Shanghai, a photographer is recording cargo being secretly loaded when he’s brutally killed and his camera destroyed. Shortly thereafter Covert-One director Fred Klein brings the word to the President that there’s a Chinese cargo ship rumored to be carrying tons of chemicals to be used by a rogue nation to create new biological weapons. The President cannot let the ship land and risk the consequences of a new stockpile of deadly chemical weapons. Klein is ordered to get the President solid proof of what the Chinese ship is ferrying.

Covert-One agent Jon Smith is sent to rendezvous in Taiwan with another agent who has acquired the ship’s true manifest. But before Smith can get the document, the two agents are ambushed, the second agent is murdered, the proof is destroyed, and Smith escapes with only his life, scant clues to mystery behind the cargo ship, and a verbal message---the President’s biological father is still alive, held prisoner by the Chinese for fifty years. As the Chinese cargo ship draws ever closer to its end port, Smith must race against the clock to uncover the truth about the ship and its cargo, a truth that probes the deepest secrets of the Chinese ruling party, the faction in Washington working to undermine the elected government, and the international cabal who is thrusting the world to the very brink of war.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

This latest product from the efficient assembly line of the Ludlum thriller factory has been somewhat overtaken by events: it revolves around a Chinese freighter carrying weapons-grade chemicals to the port of Basra in Saddam Hussein's Iraq. There are also a couple of neat subplots, including an elderly American being held prisoner in China who claims to be the real father of U.S. President Sam Adams Castilla, and the dirty doings of a giant international business combine called the Altman Group, whose members make Ian Fleming's old adversaries look like the operatives of a corner candy store. All of this provides plenty of action and intrigue for the folks at Covert-One, the top-secret agency which now operates out of a private yacht club in Anacostia, Md.-close enough to the White House for President Castilla to drop in on agency boss Fred Klein of an evening with just one Lincoln Town Car full of Secret Service folk. Most of the heavy lifting, actionwise, falls on the capable shoulders of Covert-One's Col. Jon Smith, who as "a medical doctor and biomolecular scientist" as well as an army officer is the ideal combination of brains and muscle. He needs both, as well as the patience to endure dialogue like this from Castilla: "I don't know whether you realize it, but China is one of the signatories of the international agreement that prohibits development, production, stockpiling, or use of chemical weapons. They won't let themselves be revealed as breaking that treaty, because it could slow their march to acquiring a bigger and bigger slice of the global economy." Exactly.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

About the Author

Robert Ludlum is the author of more than twenty internationally bestselling novels, including The Bourne Identity—the basis of the international hit movie--and The Scarlatti Inheritance. His books have been translated into thirty-two languages and, with over two million copies in print, are the standard by which all works of international suspense are judged.

Gayle Lynds is the coauthor of two previous Covert-One novels, The Hades Factor and The Paris Option, as well as several bestselling thrillers on her own: Masquerade, Mosaic, Mesmerized, and the forthcoming The Coil.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin; 1st edition (June 17, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312289901
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312289904
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #272,015 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Welcome to my author page. I'm the New York Times bestselling author of award-winning international espionage novels -- spy thrillers -- but when I was growing up, I had no idea ordinary people wrote books. I thought that was the literary turf of dead people, and if not them, then certainly gods and goddesses.

Despite my youthful conclusions, I still dreamed of creating the sorts of novels that would transport people to other worlds, other experiences, and leave them not only truly satisfied but feeling smarter, as I did when I read a really good tale.

Today I've published some eight novels, with a ninth on the way -- The Book of Spies, due out March 30, 2010, from St. Martin's Press. How did I get so lucky? I began writing literary short stories that were published in small journals. The discipline propelled me onward, and here I am today, creating adventure stories about London and Paris, Washington, D.C. and Rome. With me you can travel the world in my books, examining the clandestine world of spies, criminals, and secret power that quietly and importantly impacts all of us.

Some basic facts. My books have won such awards as "Novel of the Year" (THE LAST SPYMASTER) given by the Military Writers Society of America and the American Authors Associations, and have been People magazine "Page-Turner of the Week" and "Beach Read of the Week." Publishers Weekly lists MASQUERADE as among the top ten spy novels of all time. BookPage concurs: "Gayle Lynds has joined the deified ranks of spy thriller authors like Robert Ludlum and John le Carre." With Bob Ludlum, I created the Covert-One series and wrote three of the novels. One of them, THE HADES FACTOR, was a CBS miniseries in April 2006.

I'm a member of the Association for Intelligence Officers and co-founder and former co-president (with David Morrell) of International Thriller Writers. Born in Nebraska, raised in Iowa, I now live on the side of a hill in Southern California.

Thank you for dropping by. Please visit my website at www.GayleLynds.com to test your Spy-Q, visit my World of Espionage, and sign up for cool prizes.

Warm regards, Gayle

 

Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:
 (8)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Too much criticism; Open your mind and enjoy, August 24, 2003
This review is from: Robert Ludlum's The Altman Code: A Covert-One Novel (Paperback)
Growing up with Ludlum and as an ardent fan, I too have been extremely critical of these co-authored books. So much so that I decided to research exactly how much of the Covert One offerings were Ludlum and how much belonged to the co-author. As I soon discovered Ludlum ostensibly framed the idea for each of the novels but the co-author, whether it be Gayle Lynds or Philip Shelby, actually penned the novel, I felt betrayed. When I thought I was getting a Ludlum and it was only his outline, obviously then, the story must wonk. After all, it wasn't written by the Master. Many, if not most of my reviews of the Covert One novels have reflected that attitude. But, with a bit of time, an open mind, and an understanding that Mr. Ludlum is gone, I've come to enjoy these novels. Now, to set the record straight, Lynds and Shelby aren't Ludlum but, the books are solid offerings. And, to boot, Lynds and Shelby actually worked with the Master, which gives them some insight into his psyche and style. So, enjoy a novel for its intended purpose...entertainment!

THE ALTMAN CODE is the fourth offering in the Covert-One series, three penned by Gayle Lynds and one by Philip Shelby. In this book, our hero, Army Lieutenant Colonel and Covert-One operative Jon Smith is sent to unearth the shipping manifest of a Chinese ship rumored to be sailing for Iraq (timely event) with chemical-grade weapons materials. The U.S., already saddled with a black eye and international outrage over the boarding of a previous Chinese ship thought to be carrying illegal contraband, is not about to board this vessel without the requisite proof...the manifest. The timing could not be worse as the U.S. and China are on the precipice of signing a groundbreaking human rights treaty and entering a new period of open exchange and commerce. Smith's mission becomes tantamount to world peace.

As Smith arrives in China, he is immediately engaged in a gun battle with unknown assailants, a gun battle claiming the life of his contact and only source of information relative to the manifest. As Smith begins the search for answers, the unknown assailants materialize with each step he takes. To add to the prescient action, U.S. President Castilla is presented with the unfathomable...his biolgoical father, who he thought dead since his childhood, is reportedly being held in a Chinese prison as a political prisoner...and has been for 50 years! As Castilla orders a Navy frigate to shadow the ship sailing for Iraq, the Chinese match wits with the U.S. miltary mind by sending a submarine to shadow the frigate. As the story winds, matters rapidly deteriorate to the brink of the unthinkable: a U.S.-Chinese war. Like most Ludlum and, now, Covert One novels, a diabolical cabal is introduced as the dark side.

The storyline is complex (like a Ludlum novel) and presents some serious twists, some quite unforeseen (gotta love those!). As such, one must give co-author Lynds credit for bringing the intrigue to the forefront and managing what can be a very slippery slope, the complex plot. Lynds also portrays, in 'eyes wide open' fashion, the impressive and daunting presence of China as a world Superpower along with its devious political manipulations, vast populace, countless dialects and complex codes of behavior.

Net, net, it's not Ludlum. But, if one enjoys complex intrigue and international settings, Lynds does a solid job of delivering. Enjoy it; it's just entertainment.

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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Mediocre Posthumous Ludlum Covert-One Novel, July 5, 2003
This review is from: Robert Ludlum's The Altman Code: A Covert-One Novel (Paperback)
In addition to the novels Robert Ludlum wrote before his death and which are being published posthumously, he also created the idea for the Covert-One series. He wrote brief outlines (approximately eight pages) for the plots of the introductory books in the series and then critiqued the work of the authors assigned to write the stories. Thus, the early books were quite Ludlumesque in the intricacy of the plot and the intensity of the action. However, it is now sevral years since his death and this story could best be dubbed "Ludlum-Lite" since his actual involvement in this story appears minimal. The plot is complex but much more straightforward than his own novels; the action is not as heartstopping although just as deadly, and the geopolitical intrigue is much more straightforward. Gayle Lynds (this is her third Covert-One book) has the genre right, but not the Ludlum intensity and surprise factor.

The story involves a potential showdown between the United States and China regarding a ship that has a cargo bound for Baghdad that is suspected to include chemicals used in weapons of mass destruction. The suppposedly true manifest of the ship's cargo has beeb acquired by an American agent in Shanghai. Captain Jon Smith is sent to rendezvous with that agent and obtain the manifest so that the US Government will have the proof required that any attempt to board and search the ship before it enters the Straits of Hormuz is not an act of aggression. However their meeting results in an ambush and the death of Smith's contact before the manifest can be transferred. However, the agent did have time to inform Smith before Jon's escape from the assasins that President's Castilla biological father is still alive after fifty years of captivity in a Chinese prison.

The efforts to both obtain a copy of the manifest and ascertain the truth with regard to Castilla's father are complicated by the fact that a human rights treaty is in the final stages of negotiation and there are hard line factions in both governments that would like to destroy the increasing detente between them. Finally, there appear to be leaks at the highest levels of the US Government regarding all secret actions taken during the heightening crisis. As usual, Covert-One Director Fred Klein is the link to Smith's clandestine operations. And to the surprise of no reader of this series, CIA operative Randi Russell (the sister of Smith's dead wife first introduced in THE HADES FACTOR) plays a key role in Smith's survival and the ultimate success of his mission.

As the above summary should make clear, this is an action spy thriller in the Ludlum style - the heroic operator with powerful forces arrayed against him and with only minimal help. There is also the usual cynicism regarding the political motivations of most leaders and the necessity for political considerations often overwhelming simple choices between right and wrong. What is missing is the Ludlum touch that turns the routine thriller into a story that you can't put down and are often surprised by the outcome. My rating is intended to convey that this is an average novel of this genre. I enjoyed it, especially the fact that the series involves a continuing cast of characters who we are gradually coming to know. So, if you have read and enjoyed the earlier books in the series, you will probably find this worthwhile. And it is a very fast read. But you should read this series in order. One warning, the book suffers from inferior editing and proofreading.

Most importantly, unless you find Ludlum too time consuming and complex or the violence too graphic, all the books published under his name exclusively are far superior to this series. Their consistent quality helped create and define the genre, and even the recently published THE JANSON DIRECTIVE continues that tradition. Reading them will not only prove truly enjoyable but show you why he is the bestselling American author of all time. So read the BOURNE triology and all the others first, then read these if you have time and still want more.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In the Ludlum style, February 19, 2007
The recent spate of "co-writers" under the Ludlum name (with his estate's blessing) are generally quite good, but not as spellbinding as Ludlum. However they are a good read, and I would recommend them for any fan of the espionage genre.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
There was a saying in Washington that lawyers ran the government, but spies ran the lawyers. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
invoice manifest, president sighed, radar man, president nodded, blue phone
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Hong Kong, Feng Dun, Major Pan, David Thayer, Colonel Smith, Wei Gaofan, Flying Dragon, Sleeping Buddha, Standing Committee, Jon Smith, Public Security, Fred Klein, President Castilla, The Dowager Empress, Admiral Brose, White House, United States, Land Rover, Altman Group, General Chu, Niu Jianxing, Commander Chervenko, Oval Office, Arabian Sea, Asgar Mahmout
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