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Rent: Extreme Measures: A Thriller (Mitch Rapp Novels)

By Vince Flynn

Overview & Description

In the newest devastatingly intense thriller by #1 New York Times bestselling phenomenon Vince Flynn, his deadly and charismatic hero Mitch Rapp wages a war against a new enemy with the help of a fellow soldier as dedicated -- and as lethal -- as they come.

Vince Flynn's thrillers, featuring counterterrorism operative Mitch Rapp, dominate the imagination of readers everywhere. In them, Flynn captures the secretive world of the fearless men and women, who, bound by duty, risk their lives in a covert war they must hide from even their own political leaders.

Now, Rapp and his protégé, Mike Nash, may have met their match. The CIA has detected and intercepted two terrorist cells, but a third is feared to be on the loose. Led by a dangerous mastermind obsessed with becoming the leader of al-Qaeda, this determined and terrifying group is about to descend on America.

Rapp needs the best on this assignment, and Nash, who has served his government honorably for sixteen years -- first as an officer in the Marine Corps and then as an operative in an elite counterterrorism team run by Rapp -- is his choice. Together, they have made careers out of meeting violence with extreme violence and have never wavered in the fight against the jihads and their culture of death. Both have fought the war on terrorism in secret without accolades or acknowledgement of their personal sacrifices. Both have been forced to lie to virtually every single person they care about, and both have soldiered on with the knowledge that their hard work and lethal tactics have saved thousands of lives.

But the political winds have changed in America, and certain leaders on Capitol Hill are pushing to have men like Rapp and Nash put back on a short leash. And then one spring afternoon in Washington, DC, everything changes.

Using his insider knowledge of intelligence agencies and the military, Flynn once again delivers an all-too-real portrayal of a war that is waged every day by a handful of brave, devoted souls. Smart, fast-paced, and jaw-droppingly realistic, Extreme Measures is the political thriller of our time.

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ISBN 10: 1416505040
ISBN 13: 9781416505044
544 pages.
First Published:1/1/2008
List Price:9.99
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Categories this title is in
Literature & Fiction, Mystery & Thrillers, Contemporary, Genre Fiction, Thrillers, Spy Stories & Tales of Intrigue, Political

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Reviews:


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writes,

This is a very realistic thriller. Two major al-Qaeda leaders are captured and taken to Bagram Air Force Base in Afghanistan. They are visited by Senator Barbara Lonsdale who assures the terrorists that they
will be granted all rights accorded them by the Geneva accords. After
they leave they are paid another visit by Mitch Rapp and our new hero Mike Nash. Nash is a former Marine who has become a CIA counterterrorism
agent who works with Mitch Rapp. They discover that two terrorist cells have been intercepted but that there is a third cell still at large. One
of the al-Qaeda terrorists is ready to talk until they are interrupted by
Air Force Captain Leland. He attempts to arrest Rapp and is injured. Captainn Leland is angered by his treatment and turns this information over to Senator Lonsdale. Rapp and Nash wind up in front of the Justice
Committee in the Senate. They suffer harassment from Senator Lonsdale. In
the meantime the cell of terrorists lead by Karim are moving into Washington D.C. where they will unleash a frightening terrorist attack.
It is up to Rapp and Nash to stop the attack. Be sure to read this book.

writes,

I freely admit to being a Vince Flynn fan. Since finishing his first Mitch Rapp novel, I have eagerly awaited the next and devoured it with undisguised glee.

Each has been an improvement upon the last as Flynn and Rapp gather the lay of the land. I have no idea if Flynn reads his fan mail or reviews like this one. I have no idea of where Flynn's very apparent patriotism for the United States of America and its Constitution stem from. No one needs to guess, however, where Flynn and Rapp's disdain for American poliitcians comes from: all you have to do is read or watch the non-adulatory media.

Hypocrisy? A left-wing Congressman goes on a virtually Saddam Hussein paid trip to Iraq and the mainstream media says nothing of the man's motivations when he criticizes the United States. The smallest error on the part of someone not of the left is trumpeted, distorted, exaggerated and lied about for days, weeks, even months and sometimes years. In some cases, of course, the left even manufactures the lies that disparage the United States.

It is against this endless din raised by the hate-America crowd that Flynn plays to with Mitch Rapp.

Mitch Rapp is simple and direct in his approach: any enemy of the United States and its Constitution deserves, in most cases, to die.

"Extreme Measures" is more nuanced than any of the previous Rapp novels. This may, in fact, disappoint some of Flynn's fans. For the first time, the prime focus is not Mitch Rapp and the constant flow of mayhem, death and destruction he leaves in his wake.

Instead the central character is Mike Nash, another CIA operative who is effective in his own way, but has qualities Rapp lacks. Like scruples, an obsession with following the written law, a wife and family, emotions about the pain he has inflicted, even erectile dysfunction.

Nash is useful to portray the follies of do-gooder left-wingers like Senator Barbara Lonsdsale, a vain, egotistical, self-seeking, self-serving left-wing partisan who believes the rights of terrorists (not that a Londsale would ever use such a judgmental word!)are far more important than the lives of murdered innocents.

In Barbara Lonsdale, draws his most penetrating indictment yet of the left-wing mentality that threatens the destruction of the United States. People like Lonsdale who believe that terrorism is merely a law enforcement problem - as if law enforcement has ever controlled criminal acts of any kind, much less the daily beheadings, bombings and other terrors inflicted around the world by certain religionists. You need only read the daily mainstream media to read the words of the Lonsdales people have foolishly put it office.

Mike Nash represents the mythical Everyman of government servants, particularly those we might wish populated the CIA and other intelligence, law enforcement and military agencies.

Poor Nash, wanting to do his best to protect the nation, recognizing that foolish politicians block him at every turn and seeing that there is such a thing as terrorism and that it must be stopped. But the Senator Lonsdales are the allies of the terrorists and the enemies the nation.

I may open myself up to criticism on this interpretation, but that is what I see Flynn as attempting with transferring prime focus to Mike Nash in this novel. I think the experiment failed because not enough of Flynn's fans will pick up on it - and those of us who do may not care for it.

I for one prefer the flat out Mitch Rapp, take no prisoners, mayhem.


That said, "Extreme Measures" is the best of the Mitch Rapp novels to date.

It opens in Afghanistan where two major terrorist leaders are being held. Senator Lonsdale and colleagues visited the Air Force Base where they are being detained and a ladder climbing Captain arranged for the Senators to meet the terrorists. Needless to say, the left-wing Senators promised the terrorists thst not a hair on their heads would be tussled. The terrorists, murderers of the innocent, have rights you see.

After dark, Mitch Rapp arrives on the scene and despite the terrorists recitations of the promises received from Senator Lonsdale, Mitch Rapp proceeds with his brand of interrogation. ACLU members will not approve.

Things go astray and shortly Congress is out for the scalps of the CIA, Irene Kennedy, its Director, and Mitch Rapp. While the politicians mouth their obscene nonsensities, terrorists are plotting on bringing a bit of their version of "law and order" to the United States, meaning of course that mass murder is being planned.

Rapp and Kennedy play second fiddle in this book to Nash and his domestic life. It works to a degree, but not very well.

Flynn builds the suspense as the terrorists make their way into the United States while Lonsdale and colleagues plot the destruction of not the terrorists, but those who fight against them The senior Senator from Illinois is neatly parodied in "Extreme Measures" which amused me greatly because my state is embarassed by his presence in Congress,

Rapp does the inconceivable: he promise to tell the whole truth to Lonsdale's Senate committee, while at the same time he and Nash are trying to stop a terrorist attack.

Everything comes together quickly as the terrorists make their presence known in the United States. Lonsdsale is unphased by the death and destruction the terrorists begin to unleash. Her focus is on the CIA, Director Kenendy, Nash and the perfidious Mitch Rapp who have dared to "violate" the "rights of the terrorists. Aiding Lonsdale are a motley assortmentt of political appointees, hacks and so-called journalists.

For a Mitch Rapp cheerleader, the ending is a bit of a let down. There's plenty of tension, violence, gore and rough justice, but some of the elements - I won't tell you which for fear of spoiling - didn't seem to fit well.

I'll leave it to the reader to decide if Flynn didn't go a bit too far in pushing Mitch Rapp to the sidelines in "Extreme Measures". I can see why he did and the points he makes are worth making, but I prefer the far less subtle personna of Mitch Rapp making the United State through his unbridled intellect and violence.

Given all of the above, Flynn remains the best All-American thriller writer out there and I really do wish we had dozens, if not thousands, of Mitch Rapps out there defending the United States.

Jerry


writes,

Mitch Rapp fans should be warned that Extreme Measures features Mike Nash (a counter-terrorism agent who has been trained by Mitch) as the protagonist with Mitch Rapp making occasional explosive appearances. When Mitch Rapp appears, the thrills will curl your toes. The rest of the time, however, you may feel like you are listening to either C-Span or a boring prosecutor on Court TV.

There seems to be a serious purpose behind the book: To demonstrate the advantages of suspending constitutional limitations on the government when there is a clear and present danger of immediate harm from terrorists. If you want to know more about the benefits of that approach, you will find plenty to engage you in this story that will probably strike you as very plausible.

From a thriller reader's perspective, this isn't a total thriller. It's more like a book about political intrigue with thriller scenes in it.

So what's it all about? Two terrorist cells have been stopped that had been headed for the U.S. Two well-connected Taliban leaders have been captured in Afghanistan (Abu Haggani organizes suicide operations using Down syndrome children and Mohammad al-Haq is the liaison with al-Qaeda) and are in custody of the U.S. Air Force. A group from Congress has visited the detainees and promised them rights under the Geneva Convention. The CIA desperately wants to find out if there is a third terrorist cell still functioning . . . and where it's headed. Mike Nash and Mitch Rapp descend under the pretense of being Air Force personnel . . . and get caught in the act before they can find out what they want to know. The repercussions reverberate throughout the book.

In a parallel story line, there is a terrorist cell finishing its training in South America under Karim Nour-al-Din who dreams of creating much carnage for Allah. You follow the cell step-by-step as it approaches closer to its target.

In the story, there are several sources of tension:

- will the terrorists be stopped?
- will Mitch Rapp beat the rap?
- will Mike Nash survive the pressure?
- will Mike's family deal with the consequences?
- will the CIA be able to do its job in the future?

Although that sounds pretty thrilling, the book moves slowly from its opening so that the tension merely simmers along for the first two hundred pages or so. Frankly, the story would probably have made a better novella than novel by cutting out most of the background conflicts and focusing on the more imminent parts of the threat.

If you can't get enough of Mitch Rapp, don't miss the book. If you want mostly Mitch Rapp, skip the book.