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The Shark Mutiny

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It is the year 2007, and the Chinese are poised to challenge America's superiority on the open sea and upset the delicate balance of oil power in the Middle East and the free passage of the world's giant tankers.

The Chinese Navy, in partnership with Iran, has laid a minefield clean across the Strait of Hormuz, holding the world's oil supply hostage. Mystified by China's motive, yet drawn to action, the United States moves to disarm the mines with a huge display of force. At the center of the mission is USS Shark, a 30-year-old nuclear boat on her final tour of duty. When confronted with the unexpected death of brave SEALs, the unimaginable happens: the first mutiny in the modern history of the United States Navy.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Against a backdrop of Chinese efforts to control world oil supplies, a team of Navy SEALs comes under fire from Chinese forces. When the commander of the USS SHARK refuses to take action to rescue the SEALs, his lieutenant takes over the nuclear sub, setting the stage for a heroic rescue and a court-martial under the glare of the media spotlight. In this somewhat disappointing novel, the mutiny in the title doesn't take place until the fourth cassette, and its resolution seemed too pat and predictable. The narration by David McCallum is cool and capable, although his Southern accent seems a bit thick. J.A.S. (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 30, 2001
      The fifth in a series of naval techno-thrillers that includes Nimitz Class
      and H.M.S. Unseen, Robinson's latest offers little more than tired anti-Beijing paranoia and chest-thumping adulation of U.S. military might. It is the year 2007, and the U.S. national security adviser, Adm. Arnold Morgan (the curmudgeonly patriot who has graced all of Robinson's previous novels), is unhappily marking time. He has been persuaded to stay on past his planned retirement date by a jittery Joint Chiefs of Staff worried about the aging Republican president ("a complete flake"). Bored now because "the goddamned world's gone quiet," Morgan and a junior intelligence officer named Ramshawe are almost relieved to discover that devious Chinese admirals, familiar from previous installments, have teamed up with the mad mullahs of Tehran to hatch a dastardly plot: they have set up a massive minefield across the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian Gulf, directly in the path of the world's oil tankers; destroying them will drive world oil prices through the stratosphere and derail the global economy. Of course, the navy's chain of command gets in the way of those alert enough to smell a rat, and Ramshawe's warnings go unheeded until tankers start going boom. At that point, Morgan deploys the bulk of naval forces to the Gulf, and the U.S. and China go to the brink again. Robinson's description of submarine operations is not as detailed as Tom Clancy's, and his portrayal of SEALs is not as realistically gritty as Richard Marcinko's, but he does pick up handily on real world tensions. Whether or not he triumphs—and here he does not—neither he nor his hero show signs of slowing down.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Every book George Guidall reads is a pleasure; THE SHARK MUTINY is yet another example of his inimitable talents. Robinson, known for his meticulous naval thrillers, weaves a marvelous tale, focusing on actions by China and Iran to sabotage oil shipments from the Middle East. THE SHARK MUTINY, a U.S. submarine commanded by an eccentric, perhaps crazy, captain, is summoned to the region, and the captain's decisions cause a mutiny during a Navy SEAL mission. Guidall is perfect. His timing is impeccable, and he supplies a distinct personality to every character, from the Texas tanker captain to the delusional commander to China's military leaders. Guidall's memorable rendition of a Buddy Holly song would make even the most die-hard rock fan smile. D.J.S. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2002, Portland, Maine

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