“Vintage Clancy…A pleasing fairytale for people who like things that blow up.”

kirkus reviews

“Once again, the acrid scent of cordite wafted through my imagination during the climactic gun battle as Clancy’s characters from the world of intelligence achieved yet another victory over the forces of evil.”–

the washington times

Command Authority was the final spy novel Tom Clancy co-authored before his 2013 death—and we can’t imagine a more perfect send-off. This gripping thriller is set in two intertwining timelines, the early 1980s and the 2010s. In the first, a green CIA analyst named Jack Ryan gets sent to Zurich to check out the death of an agent, which appears to be the work of a slippery Russian assassin code-named Zenith. Thirty years later, now-President Jack Ryan hosts a dinner at which an old Russian friend is poisoned…and all signs point to Zenith. As the Russian military starts to roll into neighboring countries, the president’s son, Jack Ryan Jr., rushes to finish the investigation his father started decades before. Clancy and co-author Mark Greaney, creator of the tremendously fun Gray Man series, craft a tense, globe-trotting techno-thriller that’s both a throwback to Clancy’s Cold War classics and an eerily up-to-date continuation.

apple books

“In the entertaining final Jack Ryan novel from bestseller Clancy (1947 2013), Russian president Valeri Volodin has imperialistic ambitions similar to those of a certain real-life Russian president. Failure to annex Estonia thanks to unexpected NATO resistance only redirects Russian attention to the Crimea and other lands currently outside NATO’s formal umbrella. Meanwhile, President Ryan’s son, Jack Ryan Jr., investigates what appears to be an unrelated case involving Russian gangsters exploiting a corrupt system to steal a vast fortune. In fact, the opportunistic appropriation links the ambitions of a once-obscure KGB officer decades ago to the events unfolding in the Crimean region and to the early career of President Ryan himself. Although the military conflict is an important part of the plot, this is a classic spy novel. Fans of extended combat sequences should look elsewhere, as the focus is on high stakes espionage and assassinations carried out in rented rooms and dark alleys, not well-lit battlefields.”

PUBLISHERS WEEKLY

Tom Clancy Command Authority
CHAPTER ONE

The Russian Federation invaded its sovereign neighbor on the first moonless night of spring. By dawn their tanks ground westward along highways and back roads as if the countryside belonged to them, as if the quarter-century thaw from the Cold War had been a dream.

This was not supposed to happen here. This was Estonia, after all, and Estonia was a NATO member state. The politicians in Tallinn had promised their people that Russia would never attack them now that they had joined the alliance.

But so far, NATO was a no-show in this war.

The Russian ground invasion was led by T-90s—fully modernized fifty-ton tanks with a 125-millimeter main gun and two heavy machine guns, explosive-reactive armor, and a state-of-the-art automated countermeasure system that detected inbound missiles and then launched missiles of its own to kill them in midair. And behind the T-90 warhorses, BTR-80 armored transporters carried troops in their bellies, disgorging them when necessary to provide cover for the tanks, and then retrieving them when all threats had been neutralized.

So far, the land war was proceeding nominally for the Russian Federation.

But it was a different story in the air.