Best-selling author Tom Clancy, whose wildly successful thrillers made him one of the biggest publishing phenomena of his time, has died in the US aged 66.
Publishers Penguin Group (USA) said he died on Tuesday in Baltimore. They did not give a cause of death.
Tall and thin, with round, sunken eyes that were often hidden by sunglasses, Clancy had said his dream had been simply to publish a book, hopefully a good one, so that he would be in the Library of Congress catalogue. His dreams were answered many times over.
His novels were dependable best sellers, with his publisher estimating that worldwide sales top 100million copies. Several, including The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games and Clear and Present Danger, were later made into blockbuster movies, with another based on his desk-jockey CIA hero, Jack Ryan, set for release on Christmas. Alec Baldwin, Ben Affleck and Harrison Ford were among the actors who played Ryan on screen.
A political conservative who once referred to Ronald Reagan as “my president”, Clancy broke through commercially during a tense period of the cold war, and with the help of Reagan himself.
In 1982, he began working on The Hunt For Red October, basing it on a real incident in November 1979, in which a Soviet missile frigate called the Storozhevoy attempted to defect.
He sold the manuscript to the first publisher he tried, the Naval Institute Press, which had never bought original fiction.
Earning million-dollar advances for his novels, he also wrote non-fiction works on the military and even ventured into video games, including the best-selling Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon: Future Soldier, Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Conviction and Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell: Double Agent. His recent Jack Ryan novels were collaborations with Mark Greaney, including Threat Vector and a release scheduled for December, Command Authority.