I am thinking maybe somewhere around 4.25 or 4.5 stars.
A half-dead pirate is plucked from the Celebes Sea in the Western Pacific with traces of radiation. Australian officials engage Op-Center while also working with the Singaporean navy to investigate.
Even though I've watched some Clancy's movies and Prime series, this is the second thriller I've read in many many years and the first of Clancy's probably ever, so my opinion probably has something to do with me not getting used to this genre. And no, I am not planning on reading The Hunt for Red October, Clear and Present Danger, or Patriot Games.
Like the other book, this book throws a lot of names at the beginning. I have no idea who is going to be important in the story. Since this is book 10, I am guessing that most of the Op-Center characters have been introduced before. For someone who didn't start with book 1, I suppose it could get overwhelming, except I have started writing down character names for a while now.
With some many names thrown around, it wasn't clear to me who were meant to the the main protagonists and antagonists. On the protagonist side, I assumed the book was American-centric, so Jelbart or Loh was out. I thought it was going to be Hood or most likely Coffey, considering how much time the book spends on Coffey at the beginning. Unfortunately, they settled with Bob Herbert, who is my least favorite of all the protagonists. Herbert is a bit too emotional and impetuous for me, and frankly I dreaded reading when I got to page 250, because I feared that Herbert would do something really, really stupid. And I still cannot believe that I prefer the attorney (Coffey) to him.
It's interesting how Loh's insecurity and roles are being described in this book. She is generally uncomfortable working with males as they seem to look down their noses at her, but here she doesn't feel the same coming from Jelbart and Coffey. Herbert who, like everybody else, starts off not trusting her ends up admiring her.
On the antagonist side, I totally loathe John Hawke, because he always seems to get away with things for no good reason. After a while I even start to feel sorry for Kannaday, even though he's participating in a really bad stuff. Darling just doesn't seem to be as interesting as he could've been. I guess his motivation just doesn't feel very convincing, plus it gets muddled with the situation with his family. Of all the three, Kannaday is probably the only one that I felt anything more than contempt.
The story itself is fairly interesting, except for a few manufactured bumps when someone did something stupid (or unprepared) to drive the plot. Actually, even the bumps are no more than speed bumps, but they're still a bit irritating.