TALES OF THE MODERN NAVY
shallow,
hazardous Persian Gulf.The Weapon

From inside the White House, Navy commander and Medal of Honor
winner Dan
Lenson takes on threats to the President and the Nation in David
Poyer's ninth
gripping thriller about the men and women of today's U.S. Navy and
Marine
Corps.
After narrowly bringing USS Horn through a nuclear attack
off Israel, Lenson, on light duty while recovering from his injuries,
is tapped to serve on the military staff of President Robert "Bad Bob"
De Bari. Is it an
honor? Or the death knell for his career? He's not really
sure.
But he'll do his duty nonetheless. Never one to settle for
pushing paper, or for following accepted procedure, Lenson plunges into
his job as Director of Counternarcotics Interdiction on the National
Security Council Staff. His first challege is the Cartel's
assassination of the son of the new president of Colombia -- a death
the Cartel hopes to pin on the US Air Force. He's barely gotten a
lid on this when his staff uncovers a frightening terrorist plot: a
dirty bomb, smuggled into America via clandestine drug channels and
loaded onto an air freight flight. Meanwhile, an even
greater threat is building inside the United States government itself.
When
Dan becomes the aide carrying the codes to unleash nuclear war, and a
deeply
unpopular De Bari enrages both the Cartel and nakedly ambitious
elements
in the US government, Dan himself becomes an unwitting accomplice in a
plot
to kill the President -- and the only one who can possibly halt it.
Packed with vivid looks inside the White House, the Situation Room, Air Force One, counternarcotics operations, and the military aides and staff who actually exercise the powers of the Presidency in the 21st Century, THE THREAT is a spellbinding yet all too realistic thriller from first page to last.
David Poyer’s novels are ranked among the finest military fiction of our time. Not only for their vividness and authenticity, but for their unflinching probing of the deepest dilemmas of military and personal ethics. Bristling with intrigue, action, and a wealth of inside detail about how the White House actually works, THE THREAT is Dave Poyer at his very best.
ISBN... 0-312-33961-5 Price 24.95 US
REVIEWS FROM THE CURRENT PRESS:
From Kirkus Reviews:
Dan Lenson becomes the man with the "football"—that ever-present
briefcase
containing presidential nuclear codes.
Still recovering from the nuclear attack that sank
his
destroyer (The Command, 2004), Commander Lenson faces formidable
challenges
as he tries to find his balance in Washington, working closely with a
Clintonesque
president thoroughly detested by the military establishment. The Navy
has
assigned Dan to the small anti-drug task force working directly under
the
National Security Advisor. It's a thankless job, far from the work the
officer
expected to do—identifying and neutralizing the looming threat of
nuclear
terrorism. Setting aside his reservations, Lenson steers his motley
handful
of aides into the narcoturbulence and quickly counters a move by a drug
lord
that would have undermined a reasonable Colombian administration. But
as
usual, Lenson's decisive action seems only to have increased the
suspicion
with which his higher-ups regard him. Things are equally cloudy on the
home
front. Lenson's beautiful, higher-ranking wife, Blair, spends as much
time
as Lenson does away from their suburban home. Then Dan is abruptly
assigned
to the spooky duty of guarding the nuclear football for President De
Bari.
The shallow, sneaky president, the first Italian-American in the Oval
Office,
has been cutting deep into the military budget, spending the peace
bonus
rendered by the collapse of the Soviet Union on domestic priorities.
He's
also been carrying on his infamous extramarital affairs, and evidence
suggests
that Lenson's wife may be in presidential target range. Throughout,
Poyer
inserts cryptic electronic conversations among unknown parties who are
steering
someone toward an assassination job.
A gloomy story, but Poyer remains the most
thoughtful
of the military-thriller set and a master of authentic detail.
From the bestselling author of The
Med, The Circle, The Gulf, The Passage, Tomahawk, China Sea, and
Black Storm comes an exciting new novel of the modern US navy at
war.Hardcover: 352 pages
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
ISBN: 0312318367 (hardcover). Paperback available June 2005.
See the First Editions/Collector's Items page
for copies of the first edition hardcover.
From the bestselling author of The Med, The Circle, The Gulf, The Passage, Tomahawk, and China Sea comes a novel of Marine Corps special operations – the men whose bravery and sacrifice brought victory in the desert.
Six days before America invades Iraq, Saddam Hussein issues an ultimatum: If Coalition forces cross the border, he’ll turn Israel into “a crematorium.” U.S. intelligence agencies suspect he’s concealing either a crude nuclear device or missiles loaded with chemical or biological agents. A quickly assembled Marine Recon team gets the assignment for Operation Signal Mirror. In the four days left before the ground war begins, Gunnery Sergeant Marcus Gault and his Marine-Army-Navy team must land in Iraq, locate Saddam’s ultimate deterrent, and target it for destruction.
David Poyer’s novels are ranked among the finest military fiction of our time. Not only for their vividness and authenticity, but for their unflinching probing of the deepest questions of military and personal ethics. How can some men send others to die? Is it acceptable to kill the innocent, to accomplish your mission? At what point does acting against an aggressor become more dangerous than the aggression itself? Bristling with suspense, action, and intensely human characters, backed by an insider’s knowledge of Marine and Navy operations, Black Storm is Poyer at his best.
ISBN... 0-312-26969-2 St. Martin's Press paperback. See the First Editions/Collector's Items page to order
autographed copies of the first edition hardcover.
Praise for BLACK STORM
"No one writes gritty, realistic military
fiction better than David Poyer. No one."
--Stephen Coonts, author of America
“Not since James Jones' The Thin Red Line have
readers experienced the gripping fear of what it's like to fight an
enemy at close quarters. Far beyond that, Poyer's research is
impeccable, his characterization compelling, and the Iraqi Desert Storm
scenario, all too believable when we
see how the United States Marine Corp's finest
deals with the worst of what mankind has to offer. A must read for all
students of military history."
--John J. Gobbell, author of When Duty Whispers Low
"I've been a David Poyer fan for over a decade and his storytelling abilities – always first-rate – just get better and better. Black Storm is a timely, gripping, compelling yarn told by a master."
--Ralph Peters, author of Beyond Terror and The War in 2020
"Black Storm is a gripping, gritty novel that reads like the real thing. You're with the Marines every step of the way, on a search and destroy mission into the heart of Iraq. David Poyer knows his stuff."
--Vince Flynn, author of Separation of Power and The
Third Option
“ABSOLUTELY RIVETING. David Poyer has captured
the essence of what it is like on long range patrols, and what Marine
Force Reconnaissance and Special Operations Forces could face in the
ongoing war on terrorism...distinguished by quick actions and
continuing suspense that will keep the reader on edge until the very
end.”
– Maj Gen. HarryW. Jenkins, USMC (Ret),
Former commander, 4th Marine Amphibious Brigade in Desert
Storm.
Click here to read first chapter!
Booklist calls Dave Poyer's cycle of modern Navy tales "One of the outstanding bodies of nautical fiction during the last half-century." With CHINA SEA, his self-doubting protagonist Daniel V. Lenson faces for the first time the unforgiving challenge of command at sea.
Ordered to take over a Knox-class frigate from an alcoholic skipper, Dan finds he's inherited a damaged ship, an untrustworthy crew, and an ambiguous mission. He is to take USS Oliver C. Gaddis, soon to become PNS Tughril, on her final voyage to be donated to Pakistan. But in Karachi, Dan gets new orders: take Gaddis still further east, and operate against modern pirates preying on commercial shipping in the remote, dangerous South China Sea.
Pursing an elusive and shadowy foe into an exotic, isolated world of hazardous reefs and tropic islands, Dan gradually discerns a larger purpose behind his supposed objective. Who are these "pirates?" What expansionist cunning supports them? Abandoned by the Navy, threatened by a mutinous crew, a murderous shipmate, and an approaching typhoon, Gaddis struggles to survive without crossing the shadow-line herself.
Filled with suspense, battle, and unforgettable descriptions of the sea's beauty and violence, CHINA SEA continues Dan Lenson's star-crossed career in his most dangerous and equivocal voyage so far.
St. Martin's Press, paperback edition, ISBN 0-312-202-873. See the First Editions/Collector's Items page for personalized copies of the first edition hardcover.
David Poyer '71 brings the courage,
honor and commitment of sea duty to life in this vivid portrayal of
life aboard a Knox-class frigate. China Sea is the sixth
book in his well-acclaimed series of the modern Navy. Set in the
early 1990s, the young lieutenant commander, Daniel Lenson, is rewarded
with one of the great challenges that make a surface warfare career
particularly exciting. He is assigned to take early command of
the frigate, but under less than ideal conditions, in order to prepare
her for
transfer to the Pakistani Navy. The thrill of his first command
rapidly succumbs to the reality of inadequate manning, poor morale,
broken equipment and insufficient munitions as his task changes from
delivering the vessel to one of combat in the South China Sea.
The details describing
life at sea are captivating as the action is continually rolling along
and each page pulls a new twist into the architecture
of the story. In the end, the reader is treated to a fantastic
battle that pulls each of the story threads together as a tightly woven
yarn. The surface warriors that read this book will need to allow
Poyer some editorial license in stretching the limits of radar horizon,
legal authority and bumper-boat-like survivability, but these few
allowances
do not detract from the excitement of the story. In fact, Poyer
offers the tactically minded officer some clever tools to keep in mind
for those occasions we hope will never arise.
The scales of intrigue,
from murder, piracy and battle to international diplomacy, capture the
imagination with lifelike characters of heroes and villains most naval
readers can link to real people met during their own world
travels. He paints a collage of past events that provide logical
extensions of how current geopolitics may be adversely affected by
decisions made ten years ago. Interestingly, his theme of
anti-piracy tops the list of regional issues being debated in Southeast
Asia today.
Written to reflect a
time already past, his political points provide ample food for thought
in dealing with present day problems. Piracy is an increasing
problem; nations that drive ships in the South China Sea are forming
coalitions to combat piracy; China is not willing to become a
participant in those multi-lateral operations. Poyer highlights
the importance of strategic relationships in the region with Indonesia
emerging as one of the most strategic partnerships the U.S. Navy can
pursue.
China Sea belongs in the library of avid fiction readers and
deserves attention beyond the scope of mere recreational reading.
Even those that prefer non-fiction will find that this book provides
more than adequate mental stimulation. The excitement of the
chase, as described by Poyer, transforms into an educational transcript
of how the U.S. Navy plays an ever-important role in shaping our world
and the seas we sail on today. -- Lcdr George Capen USN
From Chesapeake Life Magazine:
"There is a special kind of realism
required of a naval adventure story. It should be hard-edged and
vivid and make you feel the chafe of the wind and taste the bitter tang
of
the coffee that keeps the ship's crew alert.
"The novel China Sea
delivers that sharp reality in the wide-ranging voyage
of the U.S. Navy's most mysterious frigate, whose name, nationality,
and mission are so secret, even its captain, Lieutenant Commander Dan
Lenson, doesn't know them. With a crew of naval misfits, stolen
fuel, and outdated weaponry, Lenson struggles to fulfill his uncertain
purpose: stopping the deadliest pirates in the China Sea.
China Sea is
the sixth in David Poyer's series, Tales of the Modern Navy.
Poyer grants to his protagonist, Lenson, his own introduction to the
Chesapeake region beginning with the walk from the bus on Annapolis's
State Circle to the Naval Academy for his first day as a plebe.
Poyer himself is a
graduate of the Academy and it's his naval experience that gives him
such a rich resource of locations, characters, actions, and
issues. 'A writer should write about what thrills or enrages or
repels or angers him,' he says, 'That's the source of good
writing.' And the Navy provides him plenty.
In China Sea,
honor and integrity are central, as are the conflict between the needs
of the mission and the demands of honor and integrity. 'Ethics
and the mission are often in conflict,' Poyer says of modern
naval reality. 'That's why they teach ethics at the Naval
Academy,
to help those young mids find the right way.'
His protagonist,
Commander Lenson, becomes a bit of a pirate himself to get his job done
as he discovers that the Uniform Code of Military Justice doesn't fit
the needs of a captain facing a psychopatic crewman, an incompetent
executive officer, and an unpaid crew. This
multilayered conflict against the sea, the law, the need for justice,
and the guns of the enemy combine with action, realism, and exotic
locales to make China Sea an absorbing, exciting, and
thought-provoking experience. -- Doug Palmer
In the wake of a collapsed marriage and three stressful tours at
sea, Lieutenant-Commander Dan Lenson is ordered to shore duty in
Washington. He's been handpicked by Rear Admiral "Nick" Niles for
a high-priority, top-secret assignment: help design, test, and deploy
the trouble-prone new Tomahawk cruise missile aboard the
newly-reactivated Iowa-class battleships. But as Dan
moves into the thick of weapons-acquisition politics, he discovers the
new missile has powerful enemies, determined to destroy it and
him. Leaks from the program suggest a spy is at work, and Dan
comes under suspicion. Meanwhile, he finds himself falling
unexpectedly -- and perhaps unwisely -- in love with Kerry Donavan, a
Plowshares activist on trial for her protests. Dan's response to
her mysterious murder on a Potomac towpath challenges his core beliefs
as he struggles with the defense establishment, Congress, the Air
Force, Chinese spies, and finally Libya to develop Tomahawk from a
crash-prone failure into a deadly weapon. St. Martin's Press,
paperback, ISBN 0-312-17975-8.
See the First Editions/Collector's Items page
for autographed copies of the first edition hardcover.
THE PASSAGEAssigned to straighten out the innovative but failure-prone combat
direction system of USS Barrett, DDG-998, Lieutenant Dan Lenson
is at a
personal crossroads after his divorce. As he starts his voyage,
Graciela Gutierrez starts hers, plotting a daring escape from Cuba in a
homemade
boat. Struggling to crack a computer virus, Lenson hears whispers about
Captain Thomas Leighty's sexual orientation, and doubts about the
executive
officer's loyalty. Somewhere aboard is a ruthless and cunning spy, with
a plan to lure Barrett into a frightening international
confrontation.
Suspenseful, profound, and richly peopled, THE PASSAGE asks disturbing
questions about honor, loyalty, justice, and truth. Available in St.
Martin's
Press paperback, ISBN 0-312- 95450-6.
See the First Editions/Collector's Items page
for copies of the first edition hardcover.
.
THE CIRCLEEnsign Danel V. Lenson reports to his first ship, USS Reynolds
Ryan, an aging destroyer. With a mixture of pride and fear, he
heads with her into the Arctic Sea in winter. Her orders -- to find the
worst storm she can, and stay in it. Ryan's crew is drawn into
pursuit of a rogue Soviet missile sub. But her most dangerous foe is
within, and after her
fiery loss at sea in a disastrous collision Dan confronts it in a
secret
court-martial deep in the bowels of the Pentagon. This is the novel
that
sees so deeply into the Navy psyche and the demands of life at sea that
it is required reading in the Literature of the Sea course at
Annapolis. Available in paperback from St. Martin's Press, ISBN
0-312-92964-1.
See the First Editions/Collector's Items page
for copies of the first edition hardcover.
THE GULFSet in the blistering, sandblasted Persian Gulf, The Gulf
begins with the destruction of a US frigate by a cruise missile, then
escalates into a plot of breathtaking plausibility: a US-Iran war, with
LCDR Dan Lenson, executive officer of USS Turner Van Zandt,
FFG-91, in the center of its most dangerous mission. With its highly
charged plot, its varied characters, and its authentic portrait of the
Navy's rituals, pressures, operations, and weapons, this may be the
most complex and wide-ranging Lenson novel. In print as a St. Martin's
Press paperback, ISBN 0-312-92577-8. See the
First Editions/Collector's Items page for copies of the first
edition hardcover.
THE MEDDavid Poyer's first novel of the modern U.S. Navy, and still one of his most popular. Cloaked by the dawn mists, Task Force 61 -- carrying tanks, aircraft, and over 5000 Marines -- steams east toward H-hour. Their mission: rescue 100 hostages from a mountain stronghold deep in terrorist-supporting Syria. Staff officer Lt (jg) Dan Lenson has three problems. His commodore is an incompetent coward, a war is raging in the eastern Med, and his wife is one of the terrorists' hostages. An explosive tale of international crisis, personal valor, and emotional struggle. In print as a St. Martin's Press paperback, ISBN 0-312-92722-3; unfortunately I'm all out of hardcover first editions of this title.
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