The Hunt for Red October

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Image:Hunt for Red October.jpg The Hunt for Red October, Tom Clancy's first novel, was published in 1984. The story follows the intertwined adventures of Soviet submarine captain Marko Ramius, and a CIA analyst named Jack Ryan.

The novel is sometimes referred to as the first real example of the techno-thriller, a hybrid between the spy thriller and science fiction in which attention to technical and operational detail about military and intelligence activities is paramount.

The Hunt for Red October was inspired by a real incident. On November 8, 1975, the Soviet Navy frigate Storozhevoy mutinied, which at the time the West believed was an attempt to defect from Latvia to the Swedish island of Gotland. The mutiny was led by the ship's political officer, Captain Valery Sablin. The mutiny was unsuccessful; Sablin was captured, court-martialed and executed. The novel was originally published by the U.S. Naval Institute Press—the first work of fiction they ever published, and still the most successful. Many of the characters in the novel appear throughout Clancy's subsequent works, particularly Ryan, who is the central character of many of Clancy's novels.

The novel was made into a commercially-successful movie in 1990, starring Sean Connery as Ramius and Alec Baldwin as Ryan, and featuring James Earl Jones, Scott Glenn, Sam Neill, Richard Jordan, Joss Ackland, Peter Firth, Jeffrey Jones, Courtney B. Vance, Tim Curry, and Stellan Skarsgård.

The novel also served as the basis for a computer game, as well as a board game.

It should be noted that the movie's "revolutionary" magnetohydrodynamic drive that acts as the main driver of the plot did not exist. In fact, both superpowers experimented with MHD propulsion but neither ever used it for a warship's engines. In the book the Red October uses a normal propeller system or a propeller placed within a tube for quiet operation.

Contents

Plot synopsis

Ramius, a Lithuanian by birth, who has risen to high levels of trust in the Soviet Navy, intends to defect to the United States with his officers and the experimental nuclear submarine Red October. The Red October is equipped with a revolutionary stealth propulsion system (in the movie, a magnetohydrodynamic drive), making it extremely difficult to detect with regular methods. Ramius' defection is spurred by several factors, including the death of his wife (while he was at sea) which he blames on the Soviet medical establishment's incompetence, the first-strike capabilities of the Red October, and the callousness of the Soviet establishment towards its sailors. Cold War tensions are rising, because of fleet maneuvers and the dangers of a rogue submarine equipped with nuclear weapons. However, the book reveals that Ramius' intentions were as a result of the incompetence of the doctor who had operated on Ramius' wife. Because the doctor was the son of a Politburo member, he was beyond reproach, which ultimately broke Ramius' naivete towards the Soviet Socialist System and encouraged his realization of the endemic hypocrisy that diseased Soviet thinking and government.

Ryan, an expert on Eastern-Europe and the Soviet Union, deduces Ramius' plans. The admirals meanwhile come up with contingency plans in case the Soviet Fleet, which is trying to destroy the Red October has other desires. To prevent the loss of a decisive technological advantage, Ryan must contact the Red October's rebellious captain. Meanwhile, the crew of one U.S. boat have found the secret to detecting Red October. Through a combination of circumstances, Ryan becomes responsible for seeing the sub, and Ramius, to safety from the pursuing Soviet naval fleet.

Trivia

  • Many of the actors playing American sailors took a cruise on a real submarine to get a feel for their roles. Scott Glenn, who played the commander of the USS Dallas, trained for his role by temporarily assuming the identity of a submarine captain (the sub's crew all took 'orders' from Glenn, who was being prompted by the actual commanding officer). (Glenn does have military experience in real life, being a former U.S. Marine.)
  • Videotapes of the movie were specially made; the parts of the videocassette that are normally black were molded in red plastic. This was apparently an anti-pirating measure.

See also

External links

Books by Tom Clancy

Fiction:
1980s: The Hunt for Red October | Red Storm Rising | Patriot Games | The Cardinal of the Kremlin | Clear and Present Danger
1990s: The Sum of All Fears | Without Remorse | Debt of Honor | Executive Orders | SSN | Rainbow Six
2000s: The Bear and the Dragon | Red Rabbit | The Teeth of the Tiger


Non-fiction:
1990s: Submarine | Armored Cav | Fighter Wing | Marine | Into the Storm | Airborne | Carrier | Every Man a Tiger
2000s: Special Forces | Shadow Warriors | Battle Ready



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