TRIBUTE PAID TO TOM CLANCY
Tom
Clancy, whose high-tech, cold war thrillers such as The Hunt for Red October and Patriot Games made
him the most widely read and influential military novelist of his time, has
died. He was 66.Penguin Group (USA) said on Wednesday Mr. Clancy had died on
Tuesday ,1st October,2013 in Baltimore. The publisher did not
disclose a cause of death.Mr. Clancy arrived on best-seller lists in 1984 with The Hunt for Red October. He sold the manuscript
to the first publisher he tried, the Naval Institute Press, which had never
bought original fiction. A string of other best-sellers soon followed, including Red Storm Rising, Patriot Games, The Cardinal of the Kremlin, Clear and Present Danger, and The Sum of All Fears.
Mr.
Clancy had said his dream had been simply to publish a book, hopefully a good
one, so that he would be in the Library of Congress catalogue. Four of his
books, The
Hunt for Red October, Patriot
Games, Clear
and Present Danger, and The Sum of All Fearswere later made into
movies, with a fifth based on his desk-jockey CIA hero, Jack Ryan, set for release later this year.Born in
Baltimore on April 12, 1947 to a mailman and his wife, Mr. Clancy entered
Loyola College as a physics major, but switched to English as a sophomore,
saying later that he wasn’t smart enough for the rigors of science. Ironically,
his novels carried stiff doses of scientific data.
After
graduation in 1969, he married Wanda and joined her family’s insurance
business, all the while scribbling down ideas for a novel. In 1979, he began Patriot Games, in which he invented
his hero, CIA agent Jack Ryan. In 1982, he put it aside and started The Hunt For Red October, basing it on a real
incident in November 1979, in which a Soviet missile frigate called the
Storozhevoy attempted to defect. In real life, the ship didn’t make it, but in
Mr. Clancy’s book, the defection is a success.By a stroke of luck, President
Ronald Reagan got Red
October as a
Christmas gift and quipped at a dinner that he was losing sleep because he
couldn’t put the book down — a statement Mr. Clancy later said helped put him
on the New
York Times best-seller
list.
Prof. John Kurakar
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