20 Greatest Spy Books Ever Written

14. "The Hunt For Red October" (1984) - Tom Clancy

The international number-one bestseller that launched Tom Clancy towards future heights of a spy-novel great, "The Hunt for Red October" introduces Jack Ryan to the literary world. Released in 1984, CIA analyst Ryan leads a group of covert US Naval officers deep into Soviet territory in order to attempt to steal a cutting-edge nuclear submarine along with 26 defecting Soviet officers. A 1990 film starring Alec Baldwin as Ryan was made, and this helped to showcase Clancy's daring and brilliant espionage thriller in (most) of its glory. A nuclear Third World War is just moments away if anyone makes the wrong decision - and this leads to a novel that shreds the nerves of the reader throughout with its brilliant use of suspense.
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Contributor

NUFC editor for WhatCulture.com/NUFC. History graduate (University of Edinburgh) and NCTJ-trained journalist. I love sports, hopelessly following Newcastle United and Newcastle Falcons. My pastimes include watching and attending sports matches religiously, reading spy books and sampling ales.