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The Fighting Agents

The Fighting Agents

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fact with fiction
Review: I think the best feature of W.E.B. Griffin's books is the way he mixes fact with fiction. In "The Fighting Agents", he does this very well in telling us the story of Wendell Fertig. I never heard this story until I read about it in Griffin's book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Fact with fiction
Review: I think the best feature of W.E.B. Griffin's books is the way he mixes fact with fiction. In "The Fighting Agents", he does this very well in telling us the story of Wendell Fertig. I never heard this story until I read about it in Griffin's book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: the novels of WEB Griffin
Review: Most, if not all, of the Griffin series of Military novels have one continuing factor I find most irritating. That is his worship of the Officer Corps of the Armed Services. In his novels, he portrays the Enlisted Man as a personna who is not capable of resolving any difficulty without the "expertise" of an Officer. He should take notes from real authors such as, William Manchester and Clancy. However, If the H.L.Menken school of Writing advice still exists( you will never go broke Underestimating the taste of the public) Then Griffin should continue to make money with his scribblings.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: the novels of WEB Griffin
Review: Most, if not all, of the Griffin series of Military novels have one continuing factor I find most irritating. That is his worship of the Officer Corps of the Armed Services. In his novels, he portrays the Enlisted Man as a personna who is not capable of resolving any difficulty without the "expertise" of an Officer. He should take notes from real authors such as, William Manchester and Clancy. However, If the H.L.Menken school of Writing advice still exists( you will never go broke Underestimating the taste of the public) Then Griffin should continue to make money with his scribblings.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Not a new book
Review: This book was origanally publish in 1987 under the pen name "Alex Baldwin". It is a good story in the series about OSS agents Canidy and Whittaker, and the forces in the Philippines under Brig. Gen. Fertig.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Cliffhanger time
Review: This is the fourth and final book in the series originally published under the nom de plume, Alex Baldwin. Griffin does his usual excellent job of writing a compelling piece of fiction in a setting of historical events. Bitter, Canidy, Whittaker, Fulmar and company continue their exploits, now in the middle of WW II. The question is, now that the publisher has run out of books to reprint, will Mr. Griffin give us something new in the series -- I've been waiting since 1986 to see this series continue.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Left me wanting more
Review: This was a great book, but it was definately the weakest of the series. Splitting Whittaker and Canidy into seperate story threads may have made sense, but it diluted both stories and the breaks between the two threads seemed contrived.

The treatment of minor characters like Lt. Cdr. Dolan and Joe Kennedy is, once again, one of the major draws to this series. The main characters are excellent, as always, but it is usually the secondary characters who flesh out the story lines.

I would have to say that Griffin's treatment of women is uneven, at best, in this series. The emergence of Charity Hoche as a genius/super analyst is unbelievable, due to the lack of a convincing setup, and is quite irritating. Her whole character seems to be contrived, and it seems Griffin makes her a "genius" to make up for using her as a sex object. While it might be possible to put those two characteristics together, Griffin fails.

Griffin also continues his theme that his hero is always right, especially, if the big wigs disagree with him. Canidy's "rogue" actions rank right up there with Killer McCoy (in The Corps). Just once, it would be good if the over cocky hero would screw up really bad.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Left me wanting more
Review: This was a great book, but it was definately the weakest of the series. Splitting Whittaker and Canidy into seperate story threads may have made sense, but it diluted both stories and the breaks between the two threads seemed contrived.

The treatment of minor characters like Lt. Cdr. Dolan and Joe Kennedy is, once again, one of the major draws to this series. The main characters are excellent, as always, but it is usually the secondary characters who flesh out the story lines.

I would have to say that Griffin's treatment of women is uneven, at best, in this series. The emergence of Charity Hoche as a genius/super analyst is unbelievable, due to the lack of a convincing setup, and is quite irritating. Her whole character seems to be contrived, and it seems Griffin makes her a "genius" to make up for using her as a sex object. While it might be possible to put those two characteristics together, Griffin fails.

Griffin also continues his theme that his hero is always right, especially, if the big wigs disagree with him. Canidy's "rogue" actions rank right up there with Killer McCoy (in The Corps). Just once, it would be good if the over cocky hero would screw up really bad.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: compeling
Review: twist and counter twist with plots and subplots. Who's the stand up guys and which aren't? Author does an out standing job in keeping the strings running in the same direction, coverning action in Washington, England, the Phillippines and eastern Europe. Another outstanding tale

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: compeling
Review: twist and counter twist with plots and subplots. Who's the stand up guys and which aren't? Author does an out standing job in keeping the strings running in the same direction, coverning action in Washington, England, the Phillippines and eastern Europe. Another outstanding tale


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