Mr. Clancy who grew up in Baltimore died at Johns Hopkins Hospital after a brief illness his lawyer J. W. Thompson Webb said on Wednesday. Neither Mr. Webb nor Mr. Clancy s longtime publisher Ivan Held president of G. P. Putnam s Sons said he knew the precise cause of death.
Mr. Clancy s debut book The Hunt for Red October was frequently cited as one of the greatest genre novels ever written. With the book s publication in 1984 Mr. Clancy introduced a new kind of potboiler an espionage thriller dense with technical details about weaponry submarines and intelligence agencies.
It found an eager readership. More than 100 million copies of his novels are in print and a remarkable 17 have reached No. 1 on the New York Times s best seller list including Threat Vector released last December. Prolific until his death Mr. Clancy had been awaiting publication of his next book Command Authority set for Dec. 3.
The impact of his books has been felt far beyond the publishing world. Some were adapted by Hollywood and became blockbusters starring Harrison Ford Alec Baldwin and Ben Affleck as Mr. Clancy s hero protagonist Jack Ryan. Mr. Clancy arranged for his thrillers to be turned into video games that were so realistic the military licensed them for training. And on television fast paced espionage using high tech tools in the Clancy mold found a place in popular shows like 24 and Homeland.
The enterprises made Mr. Clancy a millionaire many times over and a familiar figure on the pop culture landscape frequently seen in photographs wearing a baseball cap and aviator sunglasses and holding a cigarette. With his riches he acquired an 80 acre farm on the Chesapeake Bay. He became a part owner of the Baltimore Orioles. He even bought a tank.
It was all a far cry from his days as a Maryland insurance salesman writing on the side in pursuit of literary aspirations and submitting his manuscript for The Hunt for Red October to the Naval Institute Press in Annapolis Md. An editor there Deborah Grosvenor became mesmerized by the book a cold war tale set on a Soviet submarine.
But she had a hard time persuading her boss to read it Mr. Clancy was an unknown and the publisher had no experience with fiction. She was also concerned that the novel had too many technical descriptions and asked Mr. Clancy to make cuts. He complied trimming at least 100 pages while making revisions.
I said I think we have a potential best seller here and if we don t grab this thing somebody else would Ms. Grosvenor now a literary agent said in an interview on Wednesday. But he had this innate storytelling ability and his characters had this very witty dialogue. The gift of the Irish or whatever it was the man could tell a story.
The press paid $5 000 for the book publishing it in 1984.
The Hunt for Red October became a runaway best seller when President Ronald Reagan who had been handed a copy called it my kind of yarn and said that he couldn t put it down.
But its details about Soviet submarines weaponry satellites and fighter planes raised suspicions. Even high ranking members of the military took notice of the book s apparent inside knowledge. In a 1986 interview Mr. Clancy said When I met Navy Secretary John Lehman last year the first thing he asked me about the book was Who the hell cleared it
No one did Mr. Clancy insisted all of his knowledge came from technical manuals interviews with submarine experts and books on military matters he said. While he spent time on military bases visited the Pentagon and dined with military leaders he said he did not want to know any classified information.
I hang my hat on getting as many things right as I can Mr. Clancy once said in an interview. I ve made up stuff that s turned out to be real that s the spooky part.
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