Thanks for the info Steve.[
I'm not familiar with Brad Thor (have to look those up, as I love this type of book), but I've always thought of Tom Clancy when reading Flynn. Both are great story tellers, with similar characters and plot lines. Clancy's books are a bit dated due to the end of the Cold War, but if you've never read them, you'll be in for a treat. Start with the earliest book you can find with Jack Ryan as the protagonist, and go from there.
Has anyone ever read anything from Charlie Huston? I stumbled across this guy about 6 months ago and have read everything he's written. Very excellent story teller, whose writing packs a hell of a punch. The Hank Thompson trilogy was so good, I even ventured into the Joe Pitt series. A bit of forewarning: Joe Pitt is a vampire (yeah, I know, but trust me...) Start with the Hank series, and just move on from there if you like it.
Hank Thompson trilogy
* Caught Stealing (2004)
* Six Bad Things (2005)
* A Dangerous Man (2006)
Joe Pitt Casebooks
* Already Dead (December 27, 2005)
* No Dominion (December 26, 2006)
* Half the Blood of Brooklyn (December 26, 2007)
* Every Last Drop (September 30, 2008)
* My Dead Body (October 13, 2009)
I've actually picked up a Jack Reacher book in Books a Million and flipped through it, but didn't buy it. I may have to go ahead and buy one.Have you read any of the Jack Reacher series by Lee Child? It's not exactly the same kind of thing, but I really enjoy the character and the storylines. He's kind of like Mitch Rapp in that he's a one man ass kicking machine. Start with Killing Floor if you can find it and go from there. It's kind of hard to find older stuff locally here, so you may have to order it if your situation is the same. If you have one of those fancy, new-fangled reading jalopies, it should be cake to get a copy.
I've read two of Thor's books and I just can't get into them. I read each Flynn novel the day it comes out and once more 6 months later. I've never enjoyed Clancy's stuff. He gets too bogged down in minutiae for my tastes. I find reading him to be tedious.
I finished this one over the 4th of July weekend. I was disappointed.... and I like Brad Thor a lot. It was short and unoriginal.Foreign Influence by Brad Thor.
Gotta have a good book when working a 12 hour night shift!
I have to agree with you on this one. It was good, but certainly wasn't as good as the previous books.
Does anyone have any recommendations on an author (or books) that have similar storylines to Brad Thor or Vince Flynn? I have a hard time putting down a book by either guy and would like to find something similar while waiting on their next books to come out.
I finished this one over the 4th of July weekend. I was disappointed.... and I like Brad Thor a lot. It was short and unoriginal.Foreign Influence by Brad Thor.
Gotta have a good book when working a 12 hour night shift!
I have to agree with you on this one. It was good, but certainly wasn't as good as the previous books.
Does anyone have any recommendations on an author (or books) that have similar storylines to Brad Thor or Vince Flynn? I have a hard time putting down a book by either guy and would like to find something similar while waiting on their next books to come out.
I'm a big fan of both, and Matthew Reilly spins some similar tales. Ice Station, Area 7, Scarecrow, and Temple are pretty good, though I'm not much of a fan of his newer works. I'll agree with the Baldacci, Ted Bell and early James Rollins recommendations as well. Stephen Hunter's Point of Impact, Blacklight, and Dirty White Boys are some favorites around my house.
I just got done reading Don't Look Twice and Reckless by Andrew Gross, thinking of re-reading the Wheel of Time Series.
I'm picking through the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I'll take a break from that when it's study time, and when I get stevehawk's book...
I'm picking through the works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. I'll take a break from that when it's study time, and when I get stevehawk's book...
Hmmmm... I sent you a signed copy last week. Should have already hit your doorstep?
I always read Douglas Adams... Who doesn't like The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy?!? Now I'm reading The Hobbit for the first time.
I've always wanted to read that one. I'll have to hit the library. From what little I know, it may be a good reference book to own, for that matter.Queuing up The Art of War by Sun Tzu now.
I've always wanted to read that one. I'll have to hit the library. From what little I know, it may be a good reference book to own, for that matter.Queuing up The Art of War by Sun Tzu now.
I just started reading the Harry Potter series to my 7 year old. We're 3 chapters into the first book right now.
Which beats our usual rotation, classics such as this: