Breakpoint | 
| Author: Richard A. Clarke Publisher: Berkley Category: Book
List Price: $9.99 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $9.98 (100%)
New (41) Used (69) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 54 reviews Sales Rank: 311168
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 320 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.3 x 1
ISBN: 0425218635 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780425218631 ASIN: 0425218635
Publication Date: December 4, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: This book is in good condition with slight wear. Full refund for price of book if you are not satisfied for any reason.
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Book Description In Against All Enemies, Richard Clarke warned about how we were conducting the war against terror. In his bestselling first novel, The Scorpion's Gate, he demonstrated what could happen. And now, in Breakpoint, America's preeminent counterterrorism expert and #1 bestselling author shows us all what might come next. The global village--an intricately intertwined network of technology that binds together the world's economies, governments, and communication systems. So large, so vital--and so fragile. Now a sophisticated group is seeking to "disconnect the globe"--destroying computer grids, communications satellites, Internet cable centers, biotech firms. Hard to do? If only that were so. Quickly, a dedicated team of men and women assembles to try to track the group down, searching through right-wing militias and Russian organized crime, Jihadist terrorists and enemy nation-states. But the attacks are coming more swiftly now, and growing in destructiveness. Soon, they will reach the breakpoint--and then there may be nothing anybody can do. In an exclusive video message for Amazon.com customers, Richard Clarke introduces his new novel, and explains why, as he says, "sometimes you can tell more truth through fiction": Reviewers everywhere praised the suspense and pace of The Scorpion's Gate, the vivid depictions of war, espionage, and bureaucracy, but most of all they hailed its authenticity. "Unlike most novelists, the man has been there and done that," said The New York Times Book Review. "Some of us," added The Washington Post, "have learned to listen when Richard A. Clarke has something to say." And we'd better hope they're listening now.
Product Description IT BEGINS A DECADE AFTER 9/11...
Ten bombs explode over five states obliterating the Global Village-an intricate network of technology that binds the world's economies, governments, computers, communications satellites, and defenses. As agent Susan Connor, NYPD detective Jimmy Foley, and an expert hacker race against time, the strands holding civilization together begin to fray.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 49 more reviews...
Former Counterintelligence Expert Under Clinton Writes a Near-futuristic Novel July 16, 2008 "Breakpoint" by Richard Clarke--although I generally don't read fiction other than classically good stuff, and ordered it by accident--"Breakipoint" is an excellently written novel with timely considerations. Exactly in line with my own thinking (and in Jimmy Carter's recent book), Clarke has the villain to be a radical religious group. Muslim? Not on your life.
He also depicts how a handful of people who know how to work on-the-fly as a team, can get to the root of a problem quickly--leaving the CIA, FBI and others in the dust. It deals with conflicts coming in the not-so-distant future that will cause uproar more than Roe v Wade. It's a novel written by a man who could have prevented 9-11 if C. Rice had given him respect.
Read for the ideas, not the plot July 4, 2008 This is a very important book for political, security, and technology reasons. As Clarke notes at the end, some times you can say more with fiction.
The plot and characters are standard boilerplate, the prose, workable. That being said, read this book if you are interested in:
-- inter-agency attitudes and cooperation (or lack thereof) with each other -- how international agencies relate to each other -- the use of false fronts -- the convergence of bio, nano, and IT, and their implications -- future security implications of software management, and their relationship with critical infrastructure -- Clarke's thoughts on nation-states vs interest groups as adversaries -- how strange bedfellows can have convergent interests
I could go on, but the point is that the novel is about ideas and issues that are very relevant to our survival. Read this book if you want insights into how technology may affect our future security.
Where's the beef? May 22, 2008 Although I enjoyed the premise and readability of Richard Clarke's Breakpoint, I was disappointed with what felt like rushed work. Quite a bit of the dialogue and prose did nothing to move the plot along, and just felt like we met people for the sake of meeting them. Maybe Mr. Clarke knows that he has created perfect characterizations of the some Washington insiders and really wanted to let them know that he was blaming them as "part of the problem", but that didn't really make the book better. Bottom line: Read this on an airplane or in a beach chair, if you find it laying there left by the last person.
Needs better bad guys March 28, 2008 The science and technology held our interest. We hoped for better evil. Same old, same old. Clarke has cred. Someday we might get a real story, w/o holdback.
Great Story February 7, 2008 I purchased Break Point this weekend and due to work I am only half-way through a fascinating story.
Richard writes in a no-nonsense manner and is quite accurate on many of his military network descriptions.
We all must realize that he has worked under Secret or higher clearances and therefore has made some obvious changes to hide actual technology. I recognize this because I myself have a Secret clearance and spend a good portion of the day on the DOD's NIPRNET working with the Army's ammunition experts.
I hope to have a few novels ready to publish within the next year, so it will be interesting to see if I can come even close to Richard Clarke, or one of his reviewers from the good old state of Oklahoma, Mel Odom, who I have heard a lot about, but have yet to meet.
Good story. It is definitely worth the money for a relatively easy yet exciting tale.
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