From Publishers Weekly
Take a quest to find a lost brother, hot sex with incredibly beautiful babes, a giant man-eating beast that may or may not be a god, a sunken ship and a fortune in gold. Throw in some evil, demented villagers and a pirate or two, place these plot elements into the hands of a stylish, intelligent writer, and you've got yourself a page-turner that will take readers back to the days when a good book meant you stayed up all night under the covers with a flashlight. Jack Duran heads to Mexico with his two pals, Duff and Rock, on the first leg of what they plan as an around-the-world adventure. Their immediate goal is to find Jack's errant brother, Dan, who has been missing for months. They become involved in a treasure hunt led by the mysterious Leopold Bellocheque, a Bahamian businessman with a fancy yacht and the aforementioned babes as his crew. The hunt quickly develops disastrous and deadly consequences. Screenwriter Angsten's tall tale is for grown-up boys who lust for swashbuckling literary adventure set in tropical climes. Extra batteries for that flashlight are recommended.
(July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Review
Like Scott Smith's THE RUINS, David Angsten's DARK GOLD knows that being a young, white American unwelcome in a foreign country is far scarier than any haunted house. For fresh college grad Jack Duran, that happens to be Mexico, where he and two buddies have gone in search of his mysteriously missing, ne'er-do-well adventurer of a brother. Instead, they find trouble - on land, by sea and many feet below.
A pair of hot topless women leads - lures? - the trio to board the luxurious yacht of Leopold Bellocheque, an amiable enough rich black guy who's perusing the ocean waters for fabled sunken treasure, which Jack's brother may have hit upon before his vanishing act. Bellocheque knows a little something of the sibling's disappearance, so he engages Jack and his pals in a little you-scratch-my-back-etc. fair play - namely, help me find the gold and I'll help you find your brother. Oh, and watch out for that horned "white devil" that supposedly haunts these waters and kills people.
DARK GOLD is many things all rolled into one: a tale of high adventure, a brush with horror, and a white-knuckle thriller tinged with supernatural mystery. Despite the disparity among these genres, the damn thing actually gels, especially for a first novel. This is not a JAWS clone, however much the cover tries to sell it as one ... not to mention spoil it, since the identity of the underwater creature is kept under wraps for quite a while, even planting a nice red herring. But it is the pop-savvy pool read that JAWS was, albeit with better sex.
And I do mean better! After a long tease between Jack and one of the aforementioned naked babes, the chapter titled "Consummation" delivers the goods and then some with a multi-page romp that's one of the hottest things I've ever read - graphic without being too overtly pornographic.
So the main question is: How come I didn't know about this when it was in hardcover? For escapist, jumbled-recipe fare in this sweltering season, it's tough to beat. (Okay, so Angsten could've picked way better sidekick names than "Duff" and "The Rock," but still.) DARK GOLD marks an awfully polished debut, making Angsten an instant author to watch. -Rod Lott --BOOKGASM, reviewer Rod Lott http://www.bookgasm.com/reviews/horror/dark-gold/#more-1747
--This text refers to the
Mass Market Paperback
edition.
See all Editorial Reviews