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Special Ops by W. E. B. Griffin
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Special Ops (Brotherhood of War)

by W. E. B. Griffin

Series: The Brotherhood of War (9)

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192130,576 (3.77)None
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Jove (2002), Mass Market Paperback, 784 pages

Member:huskeymaniac
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You can always tell when you have a bad book by the "Gee, when will this end?" feeling. This book is sort of like paint drying. An example might be he spends 2 pages 'discussing' how a character in the book doesn't have a sticker for her car, and goes about getting one.

There is a saying when someone tells you something you don't really want to hear and that is "TMI - Too Much Information." Well I have coined a new one: "TMD - Too Much Detail."

If it furthers the plot, or endures the reader to the character, or paints a more detailed background, fine, but detail for detail sake is wasting my time.

I kept waiting, all 772 pages for something to happen. I knew (or sort of knew the ending) but Griffin waited until the last page to confirm it.

It wasn't a suspense issue. It just felt like I weeded through the swamp to see road I knew was there all the time.

My recommendation, is don't waste your time on this book. I have read two in the past month. Now I recall why I quite reading him years ago. Maybe I won't forget the next time. ( )
  oldsetbuilder | Sep 25, 2007 |
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List of works related to Che Guevara

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0399146466, Hardcover)

Bestselling author W.E.B. Griffin, whose novels about various branches of the military have won him battalions of fans, returns to the Brotherhood of War series with this crackling yarn. A detachment of Special Forces hotshots teams up with presidential counselor Sandy Felter to put a stop to Che Guevara's attempts to "liberate" the Congo from President Joseph Mobutu's anticommunist government.

Under Felter's direction, the Green Berets dispatch a special detachment to the Congo. Their mission is to convince Mobutu of the wisdom of the American plan to discredit and humiliate Che and his Cuban troops, rather than martyr him, and thus bring an end to his plan to export Castro-style communism to Africa and South America. Repelling the Simba insurgents with help from forces led by South African mercenary Mike Hoare, Mobutu accepts the plan, along with the Green Beret's covert assistance, war materiel, and a fighting force manned by many of the characters who peopled The Aviators, Griffin's last Brotherhood adventure. Yes, fans, the good guys are back--especially flying ace Jack Portet, (a pilot drafted into the army right out of Leopoldville, where he was helping his father run a regional airline), George Washington "Father" Lunsford, and Master Sergeant "Doubting" Thomas. And a lot of them are black, a talented crew of African American airmen and specialists pressed into the Special Forces not just because they're brave and able but because they can pass as Congolese soldiers and thereby keep the American presence under wraps.

As a matter of historical fact Guevara failed badly in the Congo, and after retreating to Cuba, tried the same gambit in Bolivia, where he eventually died under fire and gained the martyrdom the U.S. tried so hard to prevent. But Special Ops offers a close-up look at a little-known piece of military history in a gloriously testosterone-pumped epic, seasoned with a touch of sex and romance. That may seem incongruous, given Griffin's clipped, terse writing style, which is punctuated with plenty of military dispatches and a few gratuitous growls at the internecine rivalry among American intelligence agencies. It's even more incongruous when the general's daughter gets the flying ace, and her father's highly placed friends not only get Portet an officer's stripes but fly her to the Congo to stand by her man. But none of that will stop Griffin's delighted readers from snapping up his latest chronicle of men at war. --Jane Adams

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:03 -0400)

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