Trova il tuo prossimo book preferito
Abbonati oggi e leggi gratis per 30 giorniInizia la tua prova gratuita di 30 giorniInformazioni sul libro
Power Play
Azioni libro
Inizia a leggere- Editore:
- Macmillan Publishers
- Pubblicato:
- Jan 8, 2019
- ISBN:
- 9781250231116
- Formato:
- Libro
Descrizione
Power Play, a thrilling new Trident Deception short story by Rick Campbell.
The Russians have their newest class of nuclear attack submarine and is taking it, K-561 Kazan, on a shakedown cruise. Unbeknownst to them, however, this new submarine is being followed by an American submarine, the USS Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh is to gather any intelligence they can on this new Russian submarine while avoiding detection by the Russians. But what first appears to be the rollout of a new type of submarine, might well be something completely different. Instead the Pittsburgh witness a torpedo firing exercise—and the radical new technology might well not be the submarine, but the torpedo.
Informazioni sul libro
Power Play
Descrizione
Power Play, a thrilling new Trident Deception short story by Rick Campbell.
The Russians have their newest class of nuclear attack submarine and is taking it, K-561 Kazan, on a shakedown cruise. Unbeknownst to them, however, this new submarine is being followed by an American submarine, the USS Pittsburgh. The Pittsburgh is to gather any intelligence they can on this new Russian submarine while avoiding detection by the Russians. But what first appears to be the rollout of a new type of submarine, might well be something completely different. Instead the Pittsburgh witness a torpedo firing exercise—and the radical new technology might well not be the submarine, but the torpedo.
- Editore:
- Macmillan Publishers
- Pubblicato:
- Jan 8, 2019
- ISBN:
- 9781250231116
- Formato:
- Libro
Informazioni sull'autore
Correlati a Power Play
Categorie correlate
Anteprima del libro
Power Play - Rick Campbell
Begin Reading
Table of Contents
About the Author
Copyright Page
Thank you for buying this
St. Martin’s Press ebook.
To receive special offers, bonus content,
and info on new releases and other great reads,
sign up for our newsletters.
Or visit us online at
us.macmillan.com/newslettersignup
For email updates on the author, click here.
The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.
AMERICAN CHARACTERS
UNITED STATES ADMINISTRATION
Kevin Hardison—chief of staff
Christine O’Connor—national security advisor
Bill DuBose (Colonel)—senior military aide
USS MICHIGAN (Ohio class guided missile submarine)—Crew
Murray Wilson (Captain)—Commanding Officer
Charlie Eaton (Lieutenant)—Navigator
Clif Bradley (Lieutenant)—Junior Officer
Jeff Porteous (Lieutenant)—Junior Officer
USS MICHIGAN—SEAL Detachment
John McNeil (Commander)—SEAL Team Commander
Jake Harrison (Lieutenant)—SEAL Platoon Officer-in-Charge
Jeff Stone (Special Warfare Operator Senior Chief)
Sam Carver (Special Warfare Operator First Class)
USS PITTSBURGH (Los Angeles class fast attack submarine)
John Buglione (Commander)—Commanding Officer
Rick Schwartz (Lieutenant Commander)—Executive Officer
Bob Cibelli (Lieutenant)—Navigator
Mike Williams (Lieutenant)—Junior Officer
NAVAL UNDERSEA WARFARE CENTER, NEWPORT DIVISION
Tony DelGreco—Director, Code 85
John Hinves—lead torpedo mechanical engineer
Dave Reynolds—lead torpedo electrical engineer
Gino Cerbarano—lead torpedo warhead engineer
OTHER CHARACTERS
Logan Chance—Office of the Director of National Intelligence (DNI)
Carmen Aguirre—Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI)
Eric Mason—ONI Russian submarine expert
Dave Harrelson—ONI Russian torpedo expert
Vivian Best—Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
John Kaufmann—CIA interrogator
RUSSIAN CHARACTERS
RUSSIAN FEDERATION ADMINISTRATION
Yuri Kalinin—president
Andrei Lavrov—foreign minister
Sergei Andropov (General)—Chief of the General Staff
K-561 KAZAN (Yasen class attack submarine)
Anatoly Mikhailov (Captain Second Rank)—Commanding Officer
Erik Fedorov (Captain Third Rank)—First Officer
OTHER CHARACTERS
Alexei Novikoff—design lead for Russian Type 53 and Type 65 torpedoes
Georgiy Ivanov—former commander-in-chief of the Russian Navy
Elena Krayev—CIA agent
CHAPTER 1
MOSCOW, RUSSIA
Russian President Yuri Kalinin entered the Kremlin conference room, joining his senior civilian and military advisors. All stood when Kalinin entered, returning to their seats after he took his position at the head of the table. Kalinin sensed the tension in the room as he prepared to review the aftermath of their invasion of Ukraine and Lithuania. The Americans had overcome Russia’s attempt to prevent them from intervening and had soundly defeated the Russian Navy in the process. Black plumes of smoke were still rising from Russian surface combatants—those lucky enough to have not been sunk—and hours earlier, Kalinin had been forced to order the withdrawal of all Russian troops from the two Eastern European countries.
Assessing the status of Russia’s military, along with potential damage control on the political front, were the main topics of this morning’s meeting. Kalinin turned to Foreign Minister Lavrov, who delivered his brief, focusing on efforts to repair diplomatic relations with Ukraine, Lithuania, and the United States, as well as the entire NATO alliance. Preventing additional economic sanctions, on top of those already in place for Russia’s annexation of Crimea, was high on the agenda. Various conciliatory proposals were discussed. However, when the topic shifted to the status of Russia’s military, the tone took a decidedly different turn.
General Andropov, Kalinin’s senior military advisor, addressed the Russian president. We cannot let this stand. America has humiliated us. By the end of the day, images of Russian warships on fire and drifting aimlessly will be displayed on every Russian television broadcast. Public confidence in our military—and in your administration—will be seriously degraded.
Andropov didn’t have to expound. Kalinin was up for reelection next year, being challenged by a Vladimir Putin protégé who currently led in the polls. When the country learned of the military debacle, he’d surge even further ahead. Drastic action would be required to shift public opinion and reestablish the world’s respect for the Russian military. Kalinin listened intently as Andropov continued.
"Despite our surface combatant losses, our submarine fleet remains a viable asset. We still have thirty-five diesel and nuclear attack submarines, while America has only eighteen fast attack submarines after their war with China and the losses inflicted at our hands. Additionally, we may soon have an unsurmountable advantage over our American counterparts. Kazan heads to sea tomorrow for the next phase of testing. If the test is successful, our submarines will be invincible. The American Navy will be at our mercy, which opens the door to numerous possibilities.
However,
Andropov added, the required test is unusual and carries notable risks. Before the Navy proceeds, we need your approval.
He slid a folder across the table to Kalinin.
The Russian president read the directive, carefully considering the plan and its ramifications. After a long moment, he signed it. He looked up at Andropov.
Proceed with the test.
CHAPTER 2
THE BARENTS SEA
Ten miles north of Kildin Island, just off the coast of Russia’s Kola Peninsula, USS Pittsburgh cruised westward at periscope depth. Lieutenant Mike Williams, on watch as the Officer of the Deck, rotated the port periscope slowly, his right eye pressed against the eyepiece. As the scope optics swung to the south, Williams shifted the periscope to high power for a detailed scan of Kola Bay—the exit point for Russian warships stationed in ports along the shores of the Murmansk Fjord. He paused at the fjord entrance and pressed the doubler, increasing the periscope magnification to maximum.
Still nothing.
Williams released the doubler and shifted back to low power, continuing his clockwise revolution. In another thirty minutes, he’d be relieved by the next Officer of the Deck, who would have the pleasure of walking in circles for the next six hours. Although he looked forward to the end of his watch, he was disappointed. He’d hoped to be the one to spot Russia’s newest nuclear attack submarine, K-561 Kazan, entering the Barents Sea.
This morning’s intelligence message had reported Kazan would likely head to sea today. Reconnaissance satellites had monitored Kazan’s crew loading supplies and torpedoes. Shore power had been disconnected; the submarine’s reactor had been brought on-line in preparation for getting underway. Where Kazan was headed was what COMSUBLANT wanted to know, and USS Pittsburgh had been tasked to find out.
Pittsburgh’s operational order had been concise: gain trail on Kazan as she emerged from Kola Bay and follow her until she exited the Barents Sea. There were a few options as to where Kazan was headed, with the leading contenders being west toward the GIUK gap for an Atlantic Ocean or Mediterranean Sea deployment, north under the ice for transfer to Russia’s Pacific Fleet, or into a local operating area for training. Anywhere was fine with Williams, as long as there was something to trail. They’d been on station for two weeks thus far with nothing to show for it.
Williams’s thoughts were interrupted by the Sonar Supervisor’s report over the Conn speaker. Conn, Sonar. Hold a new contact on the towed array, designated Sierra two-one, ambiguous bearings two-one-zero and zero-three-zero. Analyzing.
Pittsburgh’s towed array was a valuable asset, detecting contacts at longer ranges than the submarine’s other acoustic sensors. However, the array was an assembly of hydrophones connected in a straight line, which meant it could not determine which side the sound arrived from, resulting in two potential bearings to the contact—one on each side of the array.
Williams acknowledged Sonar’s report and rotated the periscope to a bearing of zero-three-zero, shifting to high power and activating the doubler. There were no contacts. He swung to the south. As he examined Kola Bay, he spotted a small speck on the horizon. He called to the Electronic Support Measures watch. ESM, Conn. Report all radar contacts to the south.
Conn, ESM. I hold no contacts to the south.
Williams selected the Captain’s stateroom on the 27-MC control box, then with his eye still against the periscope, retrieved the microphone from its holder.
Captain, Officer of the Deck.
A few seconds later, John Buglione answered.
Recensioni
Power Play is a he-man sort of book. The kind that sadly feeds men’s insistence that women really only like bad boys . . . even reformed bad boys. Let me make it clear to Mr. Finder: there is nothing romantic or mysterious (in a good way) about knowing that your man once killed someone.
The plot stays on its carefully crafted tracks throughout. So I can’t have much to complain about there. It’s the track itself that bothers me. In this story, a man who knows quite a bit about airplanes happens to get sent to his company’s executive, good-ole-boys yearly retreat at some cabin in the middle of nowhere. I’ll spare you the detailed contrivance that gets him there. Conveniently for the author, the protagonist’s lost true love, who is not an executive and who broke up with him because he never shared anything about his personal life, also magically, contrivedly, appears on scene. Within precious few hours, the cabin has been taken over by a band of renegades seemingly bent on taking the entire executive staff hostage so as to make off with much of the company’s money. And of course, they are unopposed to using far more violence than necessary to accomplish their goal.
Of course, just to keep it interesting(??), Mr. Finder also adds liberal dashes of executive in-fighting, whining, and crotch-scratching stopping just shy (or not) of chest thumping their masculinity. Actually, I think the rescue from the almost-rape scene of the protagonist’s long lost love that crosses the chest thumping line. Or is it her overly heart-felt reaction–her desire to be touched by the protagonist so soon after the ordeal who only saves her by exercising brute strength force. I guess that’s how some men feel manly, by protecting their women folk.
My review jumps around because the story also jumps around. There are numerous flashbacks designed to let the reader into the mind of the protagonist, so that naturally by the end we understand who he is much better than those around him. And of course, he gets the girl in the end.
Contrived, contrived, contrived. While I really didn’t enjoy the actual story line, I will say that Mr. Finder knows how to write a story that moves along. He was neither too light nor too heavy with the dialog, and his general structure was well-written. In my preparation to write this review, I discovered that he has at least half-dozen acclaimed books released before this particular novel. I’ll have to ask my husband if they are all cast from the same sort of mold. Or if this was a blip in an otherwise good repertoire.
When I completed the book, I looked at my spouse and commented on the total unbelievability of the plot and wondered whether men really buy that kind of thing. And he silenced me well and good by querying the same thing of women for most of my favorite chick lit books. Touché.
But I can’t help thinking that few of the books that I choose to read for their modern fantasy appeal are half as ridiculous as Power Play.