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The Shadows of Power [Mass Market Paperback]

James W. Huston (Author)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 29, 2003

A small nation that bolsters the terrorist cause is flexing its military muscle in a far corner of the world. On a mission to the now-volatile Mediterranean, F/A-18 pilot Lieutenant Ed Stovic shoots down an Algerian MiG at the climax of a dramatic, high-stakes dogfight and becomes an overnight hero in the eyes of his countrymen ... and the target of a zealot's revenge. Suddeny Stovic and his loved ones have been marked for death by an enraged avenger, a pawn of powerful Islamic extremists with devastating plans for America.

But there is another player in the shadows, unseen by the hunters and the hunted alike. A specialist who moves covertly through the most secret branches of the government -- a lethal tool of an ambitious NSA Director who will stop at nothing to attain the power she covets -- Kent "Rat" Rathman must now devise a brilliant counterstrike ... to save a friend and his country.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

With gadgets, gizmos, guts and buckets of testosterone, Huston's latest military-techno thriller leaps into the already crowded subgenre that pits American good guys against Islamic terrorists. Huston (The Price of Power) introduces super-hero Kent Rathman, aka Rat, a versatile navy SEAL doing undercover spook work for the CIA and the National Security Council in this predictable mishmash of car chases, shoot outs, jet plane dogfights, secret terrorist plots and Washington, D.C., conspiracies. Navy Lt. Ed Stovic shoots down an Algerian jet fighter in an aerial confrontation over the Mediterranean Sea, killing the Algerian pilot. The pilot's brother, Ismael, a student in Washington, D. C., vows revenge against Stovic, the U.S. and Stovic's vaunted navy Blue Angels flying demonstration team. Rat and Stovic are old navy buddies, so Rat sees this threat as an opportunity to protect his friend and knock off another terrorist. Too early in the book, Huston reveals the villain, his motive and his deadly scheme, and there is not much left for the reader to do but follow Rat and his thick-necked pals as they chase, gun down and torture a surprisingly inept group of Algerian terrorists. Side plots involving geopolitics take a distant backseat to the chest-thumping, rah-rah bravado of Rat, Stovic and the rest of the gunslingers who think nothing of slicing up a prisoner to make him talk. There is plenty of action, but Huston forgot to add suspense and credibility, which makes this story a two-dimensional orgy of violence.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Huston revisits Washington, DC (see, e.g., Balance of Power), with a new hero in tow. Ken (Rat) Rathman gets involved in international intrigue when his old roommate's fighter plane is challenged by Algerian aircraft.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Avon (April 29, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0060008369
  • ISBN-13: 978-0060008369
  • Product Dimensions: 6.6 x 4.2 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,157,361 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

James W. Huston grew up in West Lafayette, Indiana and attended the University of South Carolina on a Navy ROTC scholarship. He majored in History with a minor in English. During his senior summer he did an exchange cruise with the French Navy then attended the University of Warwick in England to study English Reformation history and English literature.

After college he received his Navy wings as a Naval Flight Officer and was assigned to VF-84, the Jolly Rogers on the USS Nimitz. With others in VF-84, he participated in making the movie, The Final Countdown, including flying in numerous scenes and filming and directing others. While with the Jolly Rogers he was selected to attend TOPGUN.

After leaving active duty he attended the University of Virginia School of Law. He moved to San Diego to join a firm and began flying in the Navy Reserves. After a few years he transferred his reserve duty to Naval Intelligence.

He started writing in the early 90s by writing op/ed pieces for the San Diego Union-Tribune. After a couple of years of writing for the paper, he decided to try fiction. Like many aspiring writers, neither his first novel nor his second was accepted for publication. But his third was different. It combined all his experience into a compelling story -- military action, political intrigue, and Constitutional Law. He found a clause in the U.S. Constitution that hadn't been used since 1812. He posed the simple question: "What if it was used today? What would happen?"

His other novels have built on the same themes. Politics. Law. Military action. Some have more of one area than the others, but they remain true to his style and ask compelling questions while providing a thrilling read. His eighth novel, FALCON SEVEN, is due to be released on May 11, 2010.

James W. Huston is a partner in the international law firm of Morrison & Foerster and works in the San Diego office. For additional information on his books visit his website: www.JamesWHuston.com.

 

Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Just read it for the flying, July 26, 2002
By 
T. E. Vaughn (Chattanooga, Tennessee USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
After a great start with his first book about naval aviation, James Huston seems to be cranking out novels that are at best pot-boilers. Plots have gotten even more fantastic, dialogue (if not connected to flying) sillier and characters shallower and stereotypical.

This latest effort deals with a Hornet pilot who, in a confused encounter with Algerian MiGs who are enforcing their unilateral "no fly zone," shoots down a Foxbat. Not only does he become a national hero, get recommended for a Silver Star (yes, a Silver Star), but winds up flying with the Blue Angels! All of this, just as in a comic book or bad movie, really annoys the brother of the dead Foxbat pilot. He, along with assorted terrorists, sets out to get revenge on the Navy aviator and the Blues. Oh, did I mention that there's a SEAL working with the CIA and tracking the terrorists? He is coincidentally the aviator's USNA roommate and now his personal bodyguard. On and on and on... Sadly, not much is told about the Blues other than running names and it is clear that they are just wallpaper for the story. The unbelievable conclusion at the Paris Airshow removes any doubt that none of this is to be taken very seriously. By the way, the "Power" in the title has to do with some political maneuvering in the White House and the cabinet, one of a number of sub-plots.

There are the now expected typos as all editing is done by machines: "site" for "sight," for example. A read by the old "Mark One, Mod O" eyeball, operated by an actual person, would help the publishing industry.

All that said, the flying sequences are good. They have been in all Huston's books, including the abysmal FALLOUT, and somewhat redeem this novel. As a RIO graduate of TopGun, he knows naval aviation. Hopefully, he will take some care with his next book and produce a straight-forward account of carrier flying.

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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Put this on your list and buckle up!, July 27, 2002
By 
John R. Linnell (New Gloucester, ME United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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I liked this one a lot inspite of some extraneous action in the "halls of power" which is never fully explained or developed. I don't really care about some of the political power plays within the administration and they don't do much to move the story along. I am a private pilot so any book which involves flying always attracts my interest and the flying in this book is well done, as it should be because the prinicpal pilots are none other than members of the elite US Navy Demonstration Team -The Blue Angels and the author is a Top Gun graduate.

Lt. Ed Stovic while involved in testing Algeria's claim to a 200 mile territorial limit shoots down an Algerian MIG-23. While the circumstances of the shoot down are less than heroic to my thinking, Stovic is treated as a hero by his nation and the Navy and Stovic himself is more than happy to bask in the glory. This changes when he learns that Ismael Nezzar, the brother of the Algerian pilot who was killed in the action is not taking the loss well and in fact has decided to kill Stovic.

Ismael was studying in the United States (where else) when all of this begins and he therefore gets to watch the combat camera film of his brother's MIG being blown out of the sky every 10 minutes on CNN. He later learns of the fairly horrific way his brother died as he tried to escape from his burning plane. Initially, if one is to have sympathy between the two characters, Ismael has some things going for him.

Enter Kent Rathman, the third major character in the book. Rathman a/k/a "Rat". Rathman is the consumate counter-terrorist operative whose prior history (Navy SEAL) is never fully explained, but wherever he acquired the knowledge to put together an anti-terrorist organization which is more effective than those of major governments is beside the point. If the Rat is on your case, you are in serious trouble. The Rat is assigned by the White House to protect Stovic. Just to bring it full circle they were classmates at the Naval Academy.

It isn't long before Rat is earning his money in protecting Stovic. Then, soon after his return to the States Stovic is offerred a chance to fly Number 6 for The Blue Angels. The words "no thanks" never occur to him even though they do to his wife, who is less than thirlled with this assignment.

Ismael sees the opportunity, not only to avenge his brother, but to make a poitical statement in organizing an attack against the flying team at one of the most prestigioius air shows in the world, The Paris Air Show.

The balance of the book is a cat and mouse hunt for the Algerians whom everyone knows are waiting to bring the Angels to earth which focuses more on Rat's character who educates Stovic about how the war against terrorisim is fought. After a particularly brutal interrogation of an Algerian by Rat which Stovic witnesses and complains about, Rat advises him: " Look. What you do is important. I'm just telling you that today, most of the defense of the United States is done where you don't see it. And now that you've seen just a little of it, you're shocked...The world used to fight with armies, and uniforms, and rules... Not anymore. Ever since the World Trade Center, when the War on Terrorism got going, we started seeing that things were going to be different. Snake eaters like me ARE the front lines, because there aren't any front lines. And it's dirty and it's ugly. And we're wrong now and then, just like pilots are. But were where the fight is."

He has a point and he continues to make it throughout the book. Plenty of action for those who like this type of book. I do and I did. I think you will too.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Unlikely Plot, Lousy Technical Details, August 29, 2009
By 
Tetsu Uma "The 'Iron Horse'" (Illinois Native in Manassas Park, VA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
In "The Shadow's of Power," James Huston gives us an unlikely plot, that of a terrorist attack on the Navy's Blue Angels flight demonstration team, that never seems to get off the ground. The characters aren't developed and his attempts at plot twists either fall flat or are too obvious. Unlikely plot elements include that the Navy is cancelling the Blue Angels - like Congress would ever allow that. It takes away their chance to be seen in their district and from a recruitment standpoint, the Blue Angels are one of the best things out there. Huston also gets on his soapbox about how pilots are the heros while the operators on the ground are really doing the work. While true, the dialogue and the scene where used doesn't fit the plot.

Huston's knowledge of Navy flight operations seems good but the Blue Angels would never deploy on a foreign tour without their C-130 and by transiting on an Aircraft Carrier. That would take too much time. His knowledge of Stinger missiles is very poor with mistakes in simple details that any Marine PFC at the Stinger School at Ft Bliss would know. Huston seems to like to use the nomenclature of military weapons but without understanding their employment.

This book is okay for the flight ops part but poor on the rest of the details. I wouldn't waste the time.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Lieutenant Ed Stovic stared at his name on the flight schedule in his squadron's ready room aboard the USS Harry S. Truman. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
flight demonstration squadron, plumbing van, catapult officer, gun camera film, blue jets, air show, ready room, hundred knots
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Blue Angels, United States, Virginia Beach, Paris Air Show, Secretary of Defense, Police Nationale, President Kendrick, Admiral Hooker, Air Force, Ismael Nezzar, National Security Advisor, Lieutenant Ed Stovic, San Francisco, Lew Savage, Emergency Committee, Air France, Brad Walker, Chakib Nezzar, Commander Bruno, Dev Group, National Security Council, New York, Attorney General, Oceana Naval Air Station, Rick Stovic
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