New Paperback edition, 392 pages, no photos, maps or index. Book measures 7 inches tall, 4 1/2 inches wide.
New Book --- $9.95
by Alistair MacLean
New Paperback edition392 pages, no photos
New $9.95
![]()
- Buying Books - News - Used Hardback Books - Used Paperback Books - Books Under $10 - New Books - Home - Contact Us - Site Map - Email - About Us
Website designed and developed by Rick Cline Photography Best viewed with Internet Explorer 5.0 or better in a resolution of 1024 X 768. Copyright 2012 by R.A. Cline Publishing. All rights reserved.
![]()
"Anyone with a taste for naval warfare, mysteries and the Arctic in general will find this a fascinating read. I first read this book in my teens. I still return to it occasionally and never find it boring. I haven't watched the 1968 movie version of this book." unknown
"I have friends who found this book boring, and I think I see what they mean. "Ice Station Zebra" does not have the non-stop action pace of modern thrillers. What it does have, to an exceptional degree, is vivid characterization, enjoyable writing, and a sustained build-up of tension that enables the reader to miss the occasional hole in the plot. Something I truly love about this book is that there is no fat on its frame: no gratuitous violence, zero sex, no hype. In some ways it strikes me as a model for the successful thriller in its purest form, with everything potentially inessential stripped away, and I re-read it every year or two just for the sheer fun of it." R. Kunath
"What a classic! Defo one of MacLean's best. Gripping story...you don't have a clue what's really happening until you get right towards the end. Great book...and a great film too...I've actually got the theme music in my head right now!!" Fast Eddie
"One of Alistair MacLean's finest suspense thrillers. It may be more well known to some readers as a movie with Rock Hudson. Suffice to say, MacLean's novel is much better in terms of plot, suspense and coherence. The scriptwriters were morons, they should have stayed with MacLean's plot. The movie changes the ending and, again, the ending is better in the book. So if you've seen the film, don't think everything in the book is the same. It's not. MacLean seemed to feel at home in the Arctic. Several of his novels take place in the icy area and he always writes about it with skill. If you are reading one of his Arctic novels, even if it's July in Florida, you will feel chilled until you put the book down. The characters are well-drawn, the plot is first-rate, the writing is excellence and the twists will keep the reading guessing. The movie theme was excellent and Patrick McGoohan had a great role as the British agent in the film, but those were the only two items noteworthy in the cinema version. It's a great cold war thriller." George Duncan
"Alistair MacLean's 1963 Cold War thriller "Ice Station Zebra" opens with a
British doctor named Carpenter trying to talk his way aboard the American
Navy's nuclear submarine "Dolphin" in a lonely harbor in Scotland.
His announced mission is to organize the rescue of the crew of a British
meteorological station on an ice island in the Arctic, victims of a deadly
fire. As with many MacLean novels, neither the leading characters nor the
mission are quite what they appear to be.
"Ice Station Zebra" traces the Dolphin's exciting run under the polar
ice pack to reach the last know location of Ice Station Zebra. There, Dr.
Carpenter and a group of volunteers from the crew of Dolphin will
dare the weather and the ice pack to find the station and rescue its
stricken crew. Carpenter quickly discovers that the fire at Ice Station
Zebra was no accident; among the surviving members of the Ice Station is a
ruthless killer who will stop at nothing, including holding at risk the
Dolphin, to achieve his mysterious purpose. Carpenter himself proves to
have a very personal stake in the outcome of the struggle with the killer.
MacLean's brisk prose and sardonic dialogue keep the suspense crackling to
the very last page.
By the time he wrote "Ice Station Zebra", MacLean had become a highly
proficient story-teller. If parts of this novel seem a little contrived, the
wise reader will relax and enjoy the ride. This novel is highly recommended
to fans of the Cold War spy story and to fans of Alistair MacLean, master
storyteller." D.S. Thurlow
About Us R.A. Cline Publishing
Aircraft Carrier and Cruiser Losses
![]()
Other "fiction" titles
The Bedford Incident - By Mark Rascovich
The Boat - By Lothar-Gunther Buchheim
Cold Is The Sea - By Captain Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.)
The Cruel Sea - By Nicholas Monsarrat
Deepwater Showdown - By Halsey Clark
The Destroyers - By Douglas Reeman
Dust On The Sea - By Captain Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.)
Final Harbor - By Harry Homewood
The Final Voyage Of The S.S.N. Skate - By Stephen Cassell
Forty Fathoms Down - By J. Farragut Jones
Grand Finale - By Halsey Clark
The Hunt For Red October - By Tom Clancy
Kleber's Convoy - By Antony Trew
Ice Station Zebra - By Alistair MacLean
The Last Lieutenant - By John J. Gobbell
Mediterranean Maneuver - By Robert J. Szilagye and Stanley C. Monroe
USS Mudskipper - By William M. Hardy
NAVY - Battle Stations - By Roger Jewett
NAVY - Carrier War - By Roger Jewett
Not Thinking Of Death - By Alexander Fullerton
O God Of Battles - By Harry Homewood
Pacific Standoff - By Halsey Clark
Pearl Harbor Periscopes - By J. Farragut Jones
Phoenix Sub Zero - By Michael Dimercurio
Poseidon's Shadow - By A.P. Kobryn
The Pride And The Anguish - By Douglas Reeman
Run Silent, Run Deep - By Captain Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.)
The Scourge Of Scapa Flow - By J. Farragut Jones
Send Down A Dove - By Charles MacHardy
Sharks and Little Fish - By Wolfgang Ott
Silent Descent - By Dick Couch
Silent Sea - By Harry Homewood
Swordray's First Three Patrols - By Clay Blair, Jr.
Sub Sailor - By Grover S. McLeod
Submarine Wolfpack - By William M. Hardy
The Sunset Patriots - By Charles D. Taylor
Tokyo Torpedo - By Edwyn Gray
Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea - By Jules Verne
Under The Freeze - By George Bartram
Up Periscope - By Robb White
Waters Dark And Deep - By J. Farragut Jones
The Wotan War-Head - By James Follett