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Book Reviews of On Wings of EaglesBook Review: I wish I could have been there. Summary: 4 Stars
These people went through a lot and the story definately needed to be told. There were quite a few heros in this story, I commend them all.
Book Review: Non-Fiction Summary: 4 Stars
When some of the employees of the large company that made Perot lots of money get into serious trouble he doesn't get much joy from official channels.
Therefore, he decides to put together his own official rescue insertion and retrieval operation to get his people out.
An interesting tale, indeed, alongside Follet' other fictional works.
3.5 out of 5
Book Review: Not Follett's Voice Summary: 2 Stars
Follett's descriptions of people in his other books--Code, St. Petersburg, Needle--differ in many ways from the descriptions given in his name here. An example is the (second) introduction of Glenn Jackson, a computer programmer and operator, on pg. 226 of the 1983 paperback edition. The speaker talks about the man as if he's familiar, referring to him by his nickname "Rocket Man", without quotes. Adulation by the narrator for this person isn't necessary for the story. But the narrator isn't introduced as a participant in the story. Given that this familiarity and this adulation is frequent, and annoying, in descriptions of people who worked with Ross Perot, it must be Perot dictated parts of the book to Follett. Perot wanted to praise the people who worked for him, and it's his praise we see in the text.
So, just staying with this typical passage, the person is described as "a combination of a first-class mathematical brain and the ability to stay calm under stress". This is the business vernacular of Ross Perot. Follett would never independently add the articles, which is typical Texan and western U.S. talk. His narrator would never subjectively classify someone as "first-class", which is crude and strictly businessman talk, nor refer to a character by his "brain", which is immature or adolescent jive. Nor does Follett ever get wrong "duress" for "stress", which the narrator does here--staying calm necessarily precludes being stressed, nor can one be "under" stress.
This late passage is selected, not because the narrator gave way later to Perot's influence, but because the narrator has never seemed to let up, despite reader hopes, in his subjection to that influence. The narrative is just brimming in many other ways with irrelevant accounting. It keeps accounting for circumstances that have little bearing on the central story, whereas in Follett's own books, elements revolve around the central plot or he excludes them as purposeless.
One of the least interesting passages is the several pages (100-103) in which the narrator slowly introduces each one of the ten men who form the first rescue group. We are not interested in them until they do something. They are just a bunch of guys sitting around discussing a rescue that is far in the future. For instance, the narrator says that the second man in his list, Boulware, is a full five inches taller than Poche, the first man he has described. It isn't as though Boulware is using his height in the room or will be definitely using it in a rescue--or that we could possibly remember this trivia hundreds of pages later when an actual rescue takes place. And this section is just chock full of trivia like this.
I lost interest in the rescue of these men from a Tehran jail. I wanted to know, instead, how Ken Follett felt when he was liberated to write his own books after this one.
Book Review: Outstanding Summary: 5 Stars
I was on the edge of my seat from the first 10 pages. This story was unbelievable and knowing that it was a true story made it even better.
Book Review: Very inspirational. Summary: 5 Stars
I absolutely loved this book. Full of brilliance, persistence, determination, loyalty, adventure, inspiration... it was a really entertaining and uplifting to read and I couldn't believe it was a true story!
More On Wings of Eagles reviews: 1 2 3
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