From military veteran Olan Prentice comes your next best read, the GREY DRAGONS series, perfect for fans of Tom Clancy, Dan Brown, W.E.B. Griffin and Rick Campbell.
The world wakes to the brink of war as a mushroom cloud rises over the devastated Japanese port of Monbetsu.
Red Ascendant is not a novel about those abstractedly distant and safe in their ivory towers. It focuses on the stories of those that must become the tip of the spear and their successes, failures, and sacrifices.
An economic partnership between Japan and Russia dissolves into chaos with a punitive Russian sneak attack on the home islands. The timing is perfect—for the Russians. Rising public hostility has forced Americans to shutter their bases in Japan, putting the Mutual Defense Treaty at risk.
Admiral Robert Bondurant, Commander of the US Seventh Fleet, now based in Guam, scrambles to generate a measured response to the Russian aggression when he learns his wife and daughters have vanished from their Yokosuka family residence during the chaos of the Russian attack.
His counterpart, Russian Admiral Aleksandr Vostrotin, Commander of the Eastern Military District, finds himself fighting this conflict across multiple fronts, not the least of them the warmongering factions in Moscow who forced the attack on the flimsiest of prevarications. The last thing he needs is American involvement.
Surprising both opponent and ally, the Japanese invade the Russian-held Kuril islands and begin destroying Russian military satellites, effectively escalating the conflict across air, land, sea and for the first time in history—space.
Born and raised in the deep South, Olan grew up in a salt-of-the-earth family who played as hard as they worked. When time permitted, he devoured the contents of his local library, often reading two or even three books simultaneously. His summers were spent camping, skiing and fishing on Georgia’s Lake Lanier with family and exploring the verdant bayous of Louisiana with his brother and grandfather. Like any small-town boy, he yearned for more, joining the Navy to see the world. After years of exotic port visits, surviving a Pacific typhoon and massive earthquakes in the San Francisco bay area, he returned to the relative sanity of his hometown. He thrived in the dotcom craziness, establishing himself as a leading technologist. Along the way he helped define and mature multiple emerging technologies while earning five cloud computing patents. His love of reading, time in the military and adventures abroad combined to inspire him to being writing. His first book, Get Out and Thrive! was a labor of love, a way to assist his fellow Veterans successfully transition back into civilian life. Nowadays, he’s settled in that same southern paradise and spends his time writing, hiking and enjoying the company of his wife and daughter and their two dogs: Hazel, the world’s smartest Australian Shepard and her partner in crime, Redford, a mischievously ferocious Shih Tzu.
Modern sea-warfare and political intrigue at its best.
I really enjoyed the complexity of this novel but am slightly disappointed I have to wait until the next one to learn how it all ends. The action sequences are beautifully described and they make the novel difficult to put down.
Olan can be very proud of Grey Dragons-Red Ascendant. Great plot with very well developed characters. Well written battle scenes and interesting subplots. Stands right up with Tom Clancy and his successors. Can’t wait for the next book in the series! Caution, don’t start this book unless you are willing to stay up late. It is very hard to put down!
Many threads all weaving towards deception at the very top government tables. Good military scenes along with a bucket load of intrigue as the plot thickens
In this book, important events happen by chance or fortuitous causes, and not for the action of strategy. A Russian sub is seriously damaged by a rogue wave, what is the chance of that happening? 0.0000000001 % or less. Then, the same sub shutdown a P-8 Orion when a SAM that is locked is activated by a short circuit. And that is just an example. The author keeps interrupting the plot with lengthy technical discussions in the middle of important events. And there's a whole chapter on an incident between a marine captain and a lieutenant commander that doesn't add anything to the plot.. And Admiral Bondurant, supposedly a star among the most incompetent admirals in the pentagon, has no clue of what is really going on by the end of the book. Le
I am a huge fan of world wide political and military thrillers in this genre. I have read everything from the likes of LeCarre, Ludlum, Bentley, etc, and almost half of everything on Kindle Unlimited.
Grey Dragons - Red Ascendant is one of the best reads I can remember. I binged it completely. Two hours the first night and I finished it the next day. A great start, real characters, geo-political threats, Russia, China, USA, Nuclear threats, Aircraft Carriers, THREE LETTER agencies messing with marines careers. There was not a LAME character or scenario in the whole book. It is a goodreads 4.75 IMHO.
Another author who substitutes gee whiz military techno mumbo jumbo for a decent story line. Confused, overlapping plots that make little sense. Characters who were never developed except for their paranoia. An admiral in command of the Seventh Fleet that can’t trust his own staff? Government agents sent to deliberately mislead the Navy but everyone knows they are on the payroll of sinister bad guys. Why no one is arrested is never explained. So many contradictory issues in this book, let along the laborious techno language makes for a confusing read.
The author definitely did his research into Navy ships, combat systems, and multiple military technologies across numerous nations. The only complaint I had was that at times, I felt there were too many moving parts and characters that convoluted the story. I think he went too far in depth in describing the history of so many of the characters, that I began to gloss over pages of what I saw as “ filler” material. But overall, the story telling and intrigue is captivating. Definitely looking forward to the next book
There is so much detail in every paragraph that a 238 page book seems like I've read 1000. It is almost impossible to put down once started, so be prepared. Also, Prentice does not spare many gory details of modern warfare weapons at sea. It might be interesting to follow up on the careers of each of the characters, although I don't know how you could make a follow-up nearly as exciting as the 10-minutes of life and death decisions that seems like two hours. Careers are made and destroyed in a forced-through-circumstances decision that had to be made.
I did not serve. I am not qualified to comment. But....
I love this book. The language used by each character seems authentic. The events (battles fought, Fog of War, the life and death battles political fought BETWEEN ALLIES AND BETWEEN SERVICES and E V E N W I T H I N SERVICES) were vicious and plausible. I was surprised that the Chinese were not involved....yet.
Grey Dragon tells the tale of intrigue and battle between Japan and Russia that pulls in the U.S. Told in a series of vignettes, character development is limited, except for the few main characters, who emerge as the book progresses. It has many twists and turns and will keep you interested throughout. There is one epic sea battle that the reader will not want to put down once started.
The book is well written, but includes some vulgar language that is unnecessary and detracts.
I read a lot. Really good authors in military thrillers like Wallace and Keith, Rosone and Watson, F X Holden. This book was right there, grabbed me quickly and made me stay up late two nights in a row because I just didn’t want to put it down. I am so looking forward to the next book and have it on my alert list when it is out. Well done Olan Prentice!
The author has an excellent grasp of current naval technology, but more importantly, he has a very good skill at creating the characters to fill in the plot. The plot is wonderfully complex with lots of room for future interesting yarns. So all in all I can say the 5 stars are well earned.
This was a bag of international spy craft set in the rise of a possible WW3 navel warfare in the North Pole to South China Sea and Sea of Japan ,and never will you see a story were enemies and allies look like they were possessed by there nations ideology from 1940’s not the 2020’s
As exciting a read as it gets Plan Prentice has created an excellent work.
The book Red Ascendant is a a page turns out to be a page turned and sleep depriver. The non stop action and possibilities are so real. A Great works and highly recommended as required reading for any adventurous spirit.
It was a tremendous book that I didn't expect it to be so powerful. The tale both was succinct and deep. Battles were blow by blow description and I loved it. It flowed well. All in all, a great book. Kudos, Mr. Prentice!
This was believable, happened at breakneck speed, yet was an intricate and complex game of tree dimensional chess. Would highly recommend the read, and look forward to the next!,
Enjoyed reading this book…the author obviously did exhaustive research on weapons systems in Japan, America and Russia and did and excellent job developing a wide range of characters. Sometimes the detail becomes too deep, but the author did and amazing job.
This seems a really strong start for self published writer. The conflict is complex and deliberately murky as part of the larger narrative arc. I look forward to the future instalments
Better than most in the genre. A detailed look into a possible future conflict in the Pacific without becoming an overwrought parable about our current political parties. A good read, setting up the peices for what I expect will be a thrilling series.
I enjoyed the storyline. Keeps your attention. As a Navy veteran, I enjoy military books both fact and fiction, as long as it's somewhat believable. This was in that category.
dpflynn41@gmail.com Enjoyed this read very much, after 6 years in the Pacific with the US Navy , I can relate to the geography of the area and the ships but the technology is way beyond any I knew of. Great read.
Over use of plot twists, too much technical details, complete lack of character development, this author tries hard to fill the pages but this is no Tom Clancy. The story line is ambitious and has potentials, unfortunately lost to poor story telling. Overall a very unsatisfactory read.
I really enjoyed this read, the characters are real and have roles in the book at is multi layered and complex. I’m looking forward to the next chapter.