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Hunt the Wolf: A SEAL Team Six Novel
Unavailable
Hunt the Wolf: A SEAL Team Six Novel
Unavailable
Hunt the Wolf: A SEAL Team Six Novel
Audiobook8 hours

Hunt the Wolf: A SEAL Team Six Novel

Written by Ralph Pezzullo and Don Mann

Narrated by Peter Ganim

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

Navy SEAL Team Six commando Don Mann infuses his debut military thriller with the real-life details only a true insider can reveal.

In the midst of a grueling training exercise, Thomas Crocker, USN, unearths a pocket of terrorism that leads straight from the slopes of K2 to the cities of Europe and the Middle East. Crocker and his team, who are trained for the most intense kinds of combat in the most extreme environments, must blaze through a perilous web of terrorist cells to track down a ruthless sheikh who is running an international kidnapping ring before his captives pay the ultimate price.

HUNT THE WOLF is an adrenaline-packed novel sure to appeal to fans of Vince Flynn and Brad Thor, featuring the world's most elite soldiers and based on the experiences of renowned SEAL Team 6 commando Don Mann.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJun 26, 2012
ISBN9781611130119
Unavailable
Hunt the Wolf: A SEAL Team Six Novel
Author

Ralph Pezzullo

RALPH PEZZULLO is a New York Times bestselling author and award-winning playwright, screenwriter and journalist. His books include Jawbreaker, Inside SEAL Team Six and others. He lives in California.

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Reviews for Hunt the Wolf

Rating: 4.158333333333333 out of 5 stars
4/5

120 ratings15 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Well done action book. Urious what the authors other books are like
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great story line. Was very suspenseful to the very end.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Dam this was great. Needs to be a movie, get Spielberg on this. I did not want it to end. I love those Seals.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great story! Lots of action &. Suspense. I’ll have to check out the rest!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I liked the speed of events. It has the feel of real! I have serve closely with Seals. They have a bravado and a threshold of high intensity one might call insane. They love one another with lots of male mouthiness at each other. The story reader tried to put on a veneer of SEAL bravado but failed. One has to be a SEAL to even earn that gravitasse they swagger with. They are intense and can kill a normal man with rapid intent. When they get out it takes a while before they return to being a common man. They never really fully lose their warrior stance. They are scary and intense but I am glad to have known of them and served in the periphery of their activities.

    The book opens a door to the bullshit they endure from people never in harms way down range! Their world is unique and though their annals are classified, sometimes their stories do come to the public’s awareness!
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Fun book all the way through it hope you enjoy it
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Too much about training, honor, etc. show it; don't blather on about it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Don Mann draws the reader in to his world of action and intrigue with crisp, tight dialogue and colorful descriptions. The combat sequences are good, with lots of detail, but enough "fog of battle" to keep them believable. This installment is long on action but fairly short on character development with the series characters. The characterization of incidental characters is excellent, with several being intriguing to the point of wanting to know more about them. Even a fictional SSgt Nancy Cisneros, USMC deserves more than a few paragraphs in the Prologue. The glaring exception in characterization is that of the villains. The villains are cardboard cutouts set up on a known distance range. The evidence of the villains' evil is focused on American sensibilities. Corrupt governments, suicide attacks, and sex slave trafficking are global problems, but American readers will find the list of charges against the villains particularly abhorrent. Exotic locations and interesting background give the book a depth that the story line itself doesn't quite provide. Taken as a standalone novel, the book is good to very good. Taken with the background of the rest of Mann's Seal Team Six novels, it's solidly in the very good category.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Fast paced action adventure well written with characters and scenarios that are more than normal. But in steps in Seal Team Six leader and various members to save the day and do their duty no matter the cost professionally or personally. Hope to gt another prerelease book from author gain. Recommend to all action adventure iction readers
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If special-ops fiction is your thing, this is certainly one for the summer beach reading list. The pacing is frenetic and there's quite an emphasis on door-kicking (as they say) with a minimum of character development outside of the main character (the team leader). And frankly, the author is better at the action sequences anyway. While portions of the book clearly draw upon the author's experience as a SEAL team member, the full sequence of events described in the book goes a bit beyond believability due to their scale and range. However, the interactions of the team leader with the polticos in Washington ring true as they manage to spin blame toward the operators for a operation gone somewhat haywire.It's disappointing that the writing didn't delve into the mental side of the SEALs' work and also gave short shrift to the teamwork inherent not only within the team but also to the various units that provide support to SEALs in field operations. But hey, this is beach fiction (or a good choice for a cross-country flight) so there's no need to get too picky about those sorts of details.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Another great book recieved through the Advanced Reader program.Been getting into military-esque books lately from History & Memoirs and now adding novels to the list. I feel this was written very well. Character development was some of the best I have seen in many recent books. The author took great deal pulling from their experience as a Navy Seal to paint a realistic and honest portrayal about the fighting, struggles, dark sides, comraderie of the US Navy Seal Team.I feel the mountain climbing portion of the book, while it serves to build up a sense of team and comraderie and working together as a cohesive group, could have worked better as a standalone piece

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The US Embassy in Morocco is attacked and the Seal Team is sent to capture a terrorist but he slips away. While climbing a mountain Tom Crocker leans of a young girl that was kidnapped and as a promise to the King of Norway he will search for her. It turns out the terrorist is also in the human trafficking business. While Crocker gets beat up, hurt and sent to the hospital, he is ready and willing to continue his search.There is action, but there is also the whole section of mountain climbing that could have been another story and pulls away from the opening. It was okay but it didn’t hold my interest.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is a very fast read. It is such a quick read because of the pacing of the story line makes it difficult to put down. The novel is about a group of Seals sent to capture a terrorist in Karachi, Pakistan and the convoluted trail to the final show down with the terrorist. There is a side story of white slavery that becomes intertwined with the pursuit of the terrorist. While the story is good, some of the action seems to be beyond belief.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Navy SEAL Tom Crocker has led his Team 6 on many missions against terrorists who target the United States of its friends. Now he seems to have met his match in an al-Qaeda agent who has been having success with his targets.After one of the associates of Abu Rasul Zaman is eliminated, Crocker finds evidence of a major operation under way against the West and U.S. friends. At the same time, there are a number of young people across Europe who are being kidnapped and sold to Arabs. Crocker is asked to find one of them whose family is friends with the King of Norway.There isn't a lot of depth to the characters but there is nonstop action and excitement throughout the book.It's a sheer pleasure to read this exciting book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This was a fast read. Having read all the "Seal" books, i am familiar with the training, etc. which this book did not elaborate on. Our hero,Tom Crocker, learns about a young girl kidnapping ring and, with a daughter himself, jumps into the search effort on behalf of the King of Norway. Sound implausible? It is, very much so. Our hero is mauled many times but miraculously lives to fight again and again and again. It makes the Seal team members appear to be tough as nails, but a little too tough for this reader to swallow. The story line of the chase for the missing girl is fun and interesting, It's a bit hard to believe our hero meets a representative of the King on a conquest of K-2 (that's the toughest mountain in the world to climb), then continually disobeying his superiors in the CIA and others, he manages to fly to Oman, and so on.Luckily for Crocker, the bad Al Queda guys, Zaman and Rafik are also involved in the young girl trafficking. This gets more unbelievable as it moves along. It appears that the Seal veteran author and his professional writer friend have put together a wanna be thriller and really missed the mark. I would even go as far to say that "A seal team six novel" is really a misnomer.