Dale Brown used to be one of my go-to authors when I wanted to just read some mindless action/mil-thriller. But it seems that he has gone the way of Patrick Robinson. In the novel, the Chinese are stirring up trouble, throwing their weight around, and the Americans don't like it. Brown introduces some interesting ideas at the very beginning about new technologies, fancy pants EMP weapons and so on. (which the novel is named after, I think) He then proceeds to ignore these for pretty much the rest of the novel.
My next problem with this book, is his hero Patrick McLanahan. Apparently he is the CEO of a company, but generously takes virtually no salary, which ensures he lives barely above the poverty line, ensuring that he just can't scrape together the funds to send his son to a real college. Blah blah blah fake drama.
Onto my next reason for hatred - the villains. Dale Brown - and his cohort Patrick Robinson - seem to relish the idea that anyone who isn't American are unreasoning, sadistic madmen who only desire to (to quote a movie) watch the world burn. All of the Chinese politicians and military personnel in this book (bar 1 notable exception) are portrayed as gung-ho, insane Yellow Terror enthusiasts, who delight in dropping nukes with one hand, and playing innocent with the other.
Surely, for chrissakes, could we please drop this 1960s mentality in our military thrillers already? It's like everyone gets Pinky and the Brain syndrome, and believes they can take over the world. Dale Brown portrays the American politicians (party unknown) as simpering idiots, who are too busy fighting over budgetary requirements (as though finding money for military spending has ever been a problem in the real world), while the Chinese devils are running rampant. I read a Patrick Robinson novel a few months ago which was far more overt in its Dem-bashing and China-slandering, but this was coming close to it.
My final beef with the book was how it ended. It just...ended... for no particular reason. It seemed like he wrote "and then we won because Patrick McLanahan."
I won't be reading any more Dale Brown books at this stage. He used to write such interesting books. This was not, this was a terrible book.