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<text id=91TT1847>
<title>
Aug. 19, 1991: Mother of All Potboilers
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BOOKS, Page 57
Mother of All Potboilers
</hdr><body>
<p> Few writers have more cause for mourning the end of the cold
war than Tom Clancy. Starting with The Hunt for Red October
(1984), his five thrillers, heavy on technology and all bearing
directly or aslant on the threat of superpower confrontation,
have sold 28 million copies. His Clear and Present Danger
appeared in 1989 and, astonishingly, went on to become the
top-selling novel of the '80s.
</p>
<p> But the onetime insurance salesman scribbles on,
apparently undaunted by the prospect of world peace, although
Jack Ryan, Clancy's doughty, repeat-perforhero and deputy
director of the CIA, admits to a few worries: "Look, I'm not one
of those right-wing idiots who moan for a return to the Cold
War, but then, at least, the Russians were predictable."
</p>
<p> Ryan says this near the beginning of Clancy's sixth novel,
The Sum of All Fears (Putnam; 798 pages; $24.95), which,
because of its weight and bulk, will probably not become a
runaway best seller; it will become a lumberaway best seller.
</p>
<p> Why this should be so is difficult to understand. Clancy's
plot may be charitably described as complex, although
"cluttered" or "give me a break" also come to mind. Ryan meets
with White House officials awestruck by his brainpower. "I've
heard of still waters running deep, fella," the National
Security Adviser tells Ryan. "But never this deep." The Middle
East comes up for discussion, and Ryan opines that the main
problem in the area is...religion. The White House boys are
dazzled. No one, apparently, has ever seen the conflict between
Jews and Muslims in this light. Religion? And then, Ryan has an
idea: Let's enlist the Vatican in proposing a peace settlement
that will satisfy the three major religions in the Middle East.
</p>
<p> Ryan's plan slowly, oh, so slowly, gains ground, not only
in Washington and Rome but also in Israel and various Arab
states. The CIA man is modestly gratified: "It would be nice,
he thought, to set that whole area to rest." But there are evil
people who do not want Ryan's plan to succeed, and they are
scattered from the Middle East through Europe and North America.
This exfoliating network of malcontents also has access to a
fearsome means of getting the U.S. and what remains of the
Soviet Union back at each other's throats, with nuclear
conflagration as a distinct and concluding possibility.
</p>
<p> From a storytelling point of view, it was better when all
the bad guys were in the Kremlin and the good guys in the
Pentagon. Transitions between the two camps were a snap. Now,
Clancy has to hop back and forth between so many far-flung
conspirators that it is often impossible to tell where a scene
is occurring and who is talking (an old problem for Clancy,
since all his characters sound exactly the same). Presumably,
hundreds of thousands of readers will wade through this
interminable novel to find out if Jack Ryan can once again save
the world. What they should know before they begin--not that
it will make the slightest difference--is that The Sum of All
Fears is the mother of all potboilers.
</p>
<p> By Paul Gray
</p>
</body></article>
</text>