Posted on 03/17/2011 9:41:37 AM PDT by HorowitzianConservative
Throughout the history of popular fiction, the New York Times Book Review and the literati have done their best to focus public attention on writers of the Left. Nevertheless, readers have confounded them by tending to choose heroes with a more traditional, pro-American outlook and a decidedly un-nuanced view of good guys and bad guys.
So while Fletcher Knebel was cranking out critically acclaimed hardcover political thrillers like Seven Days in May from the Left, he and his ilk were being vastly outsold by paperback writers such as Donald Hamilton, Mikey Spillane, and Edward S. Aarons. In other words, by authors whose books featured he-man heroes.
In a more modern era, Tom Clancy, Dean Koontz and Vince Flynn have all dominated the bestsellers list, leaving series like Sara Paretskys ultra-feminist private eye, and James Lee Burkes (excellently written but decidedly left leaning) series in the dust.
So, here, in somewhat chronological order, is volume three of my series on 18 19 of the best heroes to star in their own series of mysteries, thrillers, and espionage novels. Some are not overtly political, but none are politically correctstill others deserve mention because they swam upstream against the prevailing literary trend of the time.
To read volume 1 (heroes 1-6) click here.
To read volume 2 (heroes 7-12) click here.
Note: Such stellar authors who definitely lean to the right as Dean Koontz, Andrew Klavan, Ralph Peters, James W. Huston and Joseph Wambaugh, are not included because they primarily write stand alone novels, and their work is not primarily identified with a dominant hero.
Also, this series was originally subtitled 18 Heroes... but of course, while writing I found one more I just had to include.
(Excerpt) Read more at newsrealblog.com ...
13. Bob Lee Swagger (Stephen Hunter)
14. Harry Bosch (Michael Connelly)
15. Elvis Cole and Joe Pike (Robert Crais)
16. Sean Drummond (Brian Haig)
17. Mitch Rapp (Vince Flynn)
18. John Wells (Alex Berenson)
19. Rakkim Epps (Robert Ferrigno)
I’m surprised that characters from Tolkien, C. S. Lewis or Ayn Rand didn’t make the list.
Or Michael Crichton, come to think of it.
It’s more focused on mysteries, thrillers, spy genre, etc.
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