![]() ![]() What the “rivet” descriptions illustrate is how dated a lot of it is. ![]() ![]() And yes, there’s the Conference Room Infodumps, which are out of place in what’s generally a low-level story. There’s some rivet-counting, and it doesn’t quite match the smooth flow of Peters’ Red Army in terms of removing almost all exact designations, but it’s not quite that bad. However, the only real twist isn’t formulaic-in a bad way. The path of the war is mostly following the understandable formulas-infodumps, viewpoint characters, a few plot-nukes, NATO winning, the drill. However, one thing made it either worse or better. However much I may criticize the actual book itself, the perseverance of its author, continuing for decades until he finally achieved the all-too-rare dream of such a publication, deserves nothing but praise.Īs for the book itself, it would have been a routine (by my standards) cold-war-hot thriller with a few ups and downs. The Red Line by Walt Gragg is a recent WWIII book that happens to have been one of the few in the timeframe released by a mainstream publisher, Penguin Random House. ![]()
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