Beginning with The Hunt for Red October in 1984, Jack Ryan (and then his son, Jack Ryan Jr.) has embodied the ultimate American: soldier, stockbroker, CIA analyst, CIA Deputy Director and then, for two terms, US President. Jack Ryans are the everyman, rising fast and headed straight to the top. First penned by Tom Clancy and then Mark Greaney and Grant Blackwood (who wrote alongside Clancy before he passed away) Ryan has never found a dire situation he couldn’t best. This is the 21st novel in the Jack Ryan universe (nine are about Jack Ryan, two are about John Clark and 10 center on Jack Ryan, Jr.) and the third written by Grant Blackwood. The novel hits shelves on Tuesday, and we were lucky enough to get a short preview.
1
Alexandria, Virginia
Jack Ryan, Jr., would later wonder what exactly had saved his life that night. One thing was certain: It hadn’t been skill. Maybe the heft of the bok choy had bought him a split second, maybe the mud, but not skill. Dumb luck. Survival instinct.
The Supermercado was neither in his neighborhood nor near his frequent errand stops, but it did have the best selection of fruits and vegetables in Alexandria—so Ding Chavez had told him eight months ago, yet it had been only recently, since his forced leave of absence from The Campus, that he’d become a believer. Being unemployed had given him a lot to think about and plenty of time to broaden his horizons. The one frontier he’d so far refused to explore despite his sister Sally’s exhortations was binge-watching Girls on HBO. That was his Rubicon. No crossing the river for the Roman legions, no chick TV for Jack Ryan. Soon, though, he’d have to make a decision about his loose-ends lifestyle. Another couple weeks and his probation would be over. Gerry Hendley would want an answer: Was he coming back to The Campus, or were they parting company permanently?
And do what? Jack thought.
He’d spent most of his adult life working at The Campus, aka Hendley Associates, first as an analyst and then as an operations officer—a field spook. The off-the-books counterterror organization had been created by his father, President Jack Ryan, and had since its inception been overseen by former senator Gerry Hendley. So far they’d had a lot of success going after some of the world’s “big bads” while still managing to make a decent profit not just for their clients, all of whom knew Hendley only as a financial arbitrage company, but also for The Campus’s covert operational budget.