Right before this book I read FULL WOLF MOON, the 5th book in the Jeremy Logan series. I liked it so much that I downloaded the other four books in the series, with DEEP STORM showing as the first. Well, out of this whole lengthy book, Jeremy Logan is mentioned on one, maybe two, pages.
That clarified, I really did enjoy this offering from author Lincoln Child.
Retired Naval Dr. Peter Crane is summoned to the Storm King oil platform forty miles offshore from Greenland. He finds that his particular background is perfect for a Top Secret operation going on on the sea floor under Storm King. The military has spared no expense in preparing an underwater research/excavation facility in that location. And Dr. Crane had to sign a multitude of non-disclosure statements to even descend to the facility, which the crew has named DEEP STORM.
There was a lot of science thrown at the reader throughout the book but the author did a great job of breaking it down into small parts and explaining it. Dr. Crane was the protagonist of the story and he found his role in the project confusing at times (as did I) but that evened out probably halfway through the book.
The story was exciting and (semi) believable but it did kind of bog down in the middle of the book.
I like underwater stories, adventure stories, thriller stories, and stories of the Arctic, Antarctic, Greenland or Iceland so this book fit these categories very well. I'm going to read TERMINAL FREEZE next, the second book in the Jeremy Logan series, and hopefully Logan will make more of an appearance.
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Deep Storm: A Novel Hardcover – January 30, 2007
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Lincoln Child
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Lincoln Child
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Print length384 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherDoubleday
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Publication dateJanuary 30, 2007
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Dimensions6.3 x 1.4 x 9.4 inches
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ISBN-100385515502
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ISBN-13978-0385515504
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Best known as the coauthor (with Douglas Preston) of such bestselling thrillers as Dance of Death, Child delivers a well-crafted and literate science fiction thriller, his third solo effort (after 2004's Death Match). Peter Crane, a former naval doctor, faces the challenge of his career when he investigates a mysterious illness that has broken out on a North Atlantic oil rig. Sworn to secrecy, Crane is transported from the rig to an amazing undersea habitat run by the military that's apparently pursuing evidence that Atlantis exists. Psychotic episodes among the scientific staff as well as the activities of a saboteur that threatens the project's safety keep Crane busy, even as some of the staff members confront him with concerns that exploring the Earth's core could be fatal to all life on earth. Crisp writing energizes a familiar plot, which builds to an unsettling climax with echoes of Child and Preston's The Ice Limit.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Peter Crane, a naval physician, flies out to an oil rig to investigate what appears to be the first appearance of an incredibly virulent disease. But when he gets there, he discovers that the problem is even worse than he was led to believe. The disease is attacking the residents of a deep-water research facility, not the oil workers, and it could be linked to the facility's excavations of an ancient site that might hold the key to the fate of the lost city of Atlantis. Child, whose stand-alone novels generally are not quite as good as the series novels he cowrites with Douglas Preston, turns the tables here, setting his hook in the first couple of pages and slowly reeling the reader in. The prose may be a tad rough, but the story is imaginative and filled with wonder. Lovers of deep-sea adventure (and in particular fans of the James Cameron movie The Abyss or Michael Crichton's novel Sphere, 1987) will want to plunge into this one. David Pitt
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
Early Raves for Deep Storm
“Lincoln Child’s novels are both thrilling and tantalizing, always managing to stay one step ahead of readers’ expectations. DEEP STORM hatches a fascinating riddle that refuses to unravel until the final exhilarating page.”
——VINCE FLYNN, NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author of ACT OF TREASON
“The suspense is harrowing and brilliantly conceived. Child tells a story with style and fascination. DEEP STORM is undersea adventure told like never before, with a terrific ending.”
——CLIVE CUSSLER, #1 NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author
“A slick, savvy, intelligent thriller with a scary, sticks-in-your-brain climax.”
——STEVE BERRY, NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author of THE TEMPLAR LEGACY
“Few writers do it better than Child.”
—Booklist
“Lincoln Child’s novels are both thrilling and tantalizing, always managing to stay one step ahead of readers’ expectations. DEEP STORM hatches a fascinating riddle that refuses to unravel until the final exhilarating page.”
——VINCE FLYNN, NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author of ACT OF TREASON
“The suspense is harrowing and brilliantly conceived. Child tells a story with style and fascination. DEEP STORM is undersea adventure told like never before, with a terrific ending.”
——CLIVE CUSSLER, #1 NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author
“A slick, savvy, intelligent thriller with a scary, sticks-in-your-brain climax.”
——STEVE BERRY, NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author of THE TEMPLAR LEGACY
“Few writers do it better than Child.”
—Booklist
About the Author
LINCOLN CHILD is the author of Death Match and Utopia, as well as coauthor, with Douglas Preston, of The Book of the Dead, Dance of Death, The Cabinet of Curiosities, and numerous other bestselling thrillers. He lives in Morristown, New Jersey.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
1
It looked, Peter Crane thought, like a stork: a huge white stork, rising out of the water on ridiculously delicate legs. But as the helicopter drew closer and the distant outline sharpened against the sea horizon, the resemblance gradually fell away. The legs grew sturdier, became tubular pylons of steel and pre–stressed concrete. The central body became a multi–level superstructure, studded with flare stacks and turbines, festooned with spars and girders. And the thin, neck–like object above resolved into a complex crane-and-derrick assembly, rising several hundred feet above the superstructure.
The pilot pointed at the approaching platform, held up two fingers. Crane nodded his understanding.
It was a brilliant, cloudless day, and Crane squinted against the bright ocean stretching away on all sides. He felt tired and disoriented by travel: commercial flight from Miami to New York, private Gulfstream G150 charter to Reykjavik, and now helicopter. But the weariness hadn’t blunted his deep—and growing—curiosity.
It wasn’t so much that Amalgamated Shale was interested in his particular expertise: that he thought he could understand. It was the hurry with which they’d wanted him to drop everything and rush out to the Storm King platform that surprised him. Then there was the fact that AmShale’s forward headquarters in Iceland had, rather oddly, been bustling with technicians and engineers rather than the usual drillers and roughnecks.
And then there was the other thing. The helicopter pilot wasn’t an AmShale employee. He wore a Navy uniform—and a sidearm.
As the chopper banked sharply around the side of the platform, heading for the landing zone, Crane realized for the first time just how large the oil rig was. The jacket structure alone had to be eight stories high. Its upper deck was covered with a bewildering maze of modular structures. Here and there, men in yellow safety uniforms checked couplings and worked pump equipment, dwarfed by the machinery that surrounded them. Far, far below, the ocean frothed and worried around the pillars of the substructure, where it vanished beneath the surface to run the thousands of feet to the sea floor itself.
The chopper slowed, turned, and settled down onto the green hexagon of the landing zone. As Crane reached back for his bags, he noticed that someone was standing at the edge of the LZ, waiting: a tall, thin woman in an oilskin jacket. He thanked the pilot, opened the passenger door, and stepped out into frigid air, ducking instinctively under the whirring blades.
The woman held out her hand at his approach. “Dr. Crane?”
Crane shook the hand. “Yes.”
“This way, please.” The woman turned and led the way off the landing platform, down a short set of stairs, and along a metal catwalk to a closed, submarine–style hatch. She did not give her name.
A uniformed seaman stood guard outside the hatch, rifle at his side. He nodded as they approached, opened the hatch, then closed and secured it behind them.
Beyond lay a spacious, brightly–lit corridor, studded along both sides with open doors. There was no frantic hum of turbines, no deep throbbing of derrick equipment. The smell of oil, though detectable, was faint, almost as if efforts had been made to remove it.
Crane followed the woman, bags slung over his shoulder, glancing curiously into the rooms as he passed. Once again, curiosity pricked at him: there were laboratories full of whiteboards and workstations; computer centers; communications suites. Topside had been quiet, but there was plenty of activity here.
Crane decided he’d venture a question. “Are the divers in a hyperbaric chamber?” he asked. “Can I see them now?”
“This way, please,” the woman repeated.
They turned a corner, descended a staircase, and entered another hallway, even wider and longer than the first. The rooms they passed were larger here: machine shops, storage bays for high–tech equipment Crane didn’t recognize. Crane frowned. Although Storm King resembled an oil rig in all outward appearances, it was clearly no longer in the business of pumping crude.
What the hell is going on here?
“Have any vascular specialists or pulmonologists been flown in from Iceland?” he asked.
The woman didn’t answer, and Crane shrugged. He’d come this far—he could stand to wait another couple of minutes.
Up ahead, the woman had stopped before a closed door of gray metal. “Mr. Lassiter is waiting for you,” she said.
Lassiter? Crane wondered. That wasn’t a name he recognized. The person who’d spoken to him over the phone, briefed him about the problem at the rig, had been named Simon. He glanced at the door. There was the nameplate, white letters on black plastic, spelling out E. Lassiter, External Liaison.
Crane turned back to the woman in the oilskin jacket, but she was already moving down the corridor. He shifted his bags, knocked on the door.
“Enter,” came the crisp voice from within.
E. Lassiter was a tall, thin man with closely–cropped blond hair. He stood up as Crane entered, came around his desk, shook hands. He wasn’t wearing a military uniform, but with his haircut and his brisk, economical movements he might as well have been. The office was small and just as efficient–looking as its tenant. The desk was almost studiously bare: there was a single manila envelope on it, carefully sealed, and a digital recorder.
“You can stow your gear there,” Lassiter said, indicating a far corner. “Please sit down.”
“Thanks.” Crane took the proffered seat. “I’m eager to learn just what the emergency is. My escort here didn't have much to say on the subject.”
“Actually, neither will I.” Lassiter gave a brief smile, which disappeared as quickly as it came. “That will come. My job is to ask you a few questions.”
Crane digested this. “Go ahead,” he said after a moment.
Lassiter pressed a button on the recorder. “This recording is taking place on June 2. Present are myself—Edward Lassiter—and Dr. Peter Crane. Location is the E. R. F. Support and Supply Station.” Lassiter glanced over the desk at Crane. “Dr. Crane, you are aware that your tour of service here cannot be fixed to a specific length?”
“Yes.”
“And you understand that you must never divulge anything you witness here, or recount your actions while at the Facility?”
“Yes.”
“And are you willing to sign an affidavit to that effect?”
“Yes.”
“Dr. Crane, have you ever been arrested?”
“No.”
“Were you born a citizen of the United States, or are you naturalized?”
“I was born in New York City.”
“Are you taking medication for any ongoing physical condition?”
“No.”
“Do you abuse alcohol or drugs with any regularity?”
Crane had fielded the questions with growing surprise. “Unless you call the occasional weekend six–pack ‘abuse’, then no.”
Lassiter didn’t smile. “Are you claustrophobic, Dr. Crane?”
“No.”
Lassiter put the recorder on pause. Then he picked up the manila envelope, slit it open with a finger, pulled out half a dozen sheets of paper, and passed them across the table. “If you could please read and sign each of these,” he said, plucking a pen from a pocket and placing it beside the sheets.
Crane picked them up and began to read. As he did so, his surprise turned to something close to disbelief. There were three separate non–disclosure agreements, an Official Secrets Act affidavit, and something called a Binding Cooperation Initiative. All were branded documents of the U.S. Government; all required signature; and all threatened dire consequences if any of their articles were breached.
Crane put the documents down. He was uncomfortably aware of Lassiter’s gaze upon him. This was too much. Maybe he should thank Lassiter politely, then excuse himself and head back to Florida.
But how, exactly, was he going to do that? AmShale had already paid a great deal of money to get him here. The helicopter had already left. He was—to put it euphemistically—between research projects at the moment. And besides, he had never been one to turn down a challenge: especially one as mysterious as this.
He picked up the pen and, without giving himself time to reconsider, signed all six documents.
“Thank you,” Lassiter said. He started the recorder again. “Let the transcript show that Dr. Crane has signed the requisite forms.” Then, snapping off the recorder, he stood. “If you'll follow me, Doctor, I think you'll get your answers.”
He led the way out of the office and down the corridor, through a labyrinthine administrative area, up an elevator, and into a well–furnished library, stocked with books, magazines, and computer workstations. Lassiter gestured toward a table on the far side of the room, which held only a computer monitor. “I’ll come back for you,” he said, then turned on his heel and left the room.
Crane sat where directed, watching the door close behind Lassiter. There was nobody else in the library, and he was beginning to wonder what would happen next, when the computer screen winked on in front of him. It showed the face of a grey–haired, deeply tanned man in his late sixties. Some kind of introductory video, Crane thought. But when the face smiled directly at him, he realized he wasn't looking at a computer m...
It looked, Peter Crane thought, like a stork: a huge white stork, rising out of the water on ridiculously delicate legs. But as the helicopter drew closer and the distant outline sharpened against the sea horizon, the resemblance gradually fell away. The legs grew sturdier, became tubular pylons of steel and pre–stressed concrete. The central body became a multi–level superstructure, studded with flare stacks and turbines, festooned with spars and girders. And the thin, neck–like object above resolved into a complex crane-and-derrick assembly, rising several hundred feet above the superstructure.
The pilot pointed at the approaching platform, held up two fingers. Crane nodded his understanding.
It was a brilliant, cloudless day, and Crane squinted against the bright ocean stretching away on all sides. He felt tired and disoriented by travel: commercial flight from Miami to New York, private Gulfstream G150 charter to Reykjavik, and now helicopter. But the weariness hadn’t blunted his deep—and growing—curiosity.
It wasn’t so much that Amalgamated Shale was interested in his particular expertise: that he thought he could understand. It was the hurry with which they’d wanted him to drop everything and rush out to the Storm King platform that surprised him. Then there was the fact that AmShale’s forward headquarters in Iceland had, rather oddly, been bustling with technicians and engineers rather than the usual drillers and roughnecks.
And then there was the other thing. The helicopter pilot wasn’t an AmShale employee. He wore a Navy uniform—and a sidearm.
As the chopper banked sharply around the side of the platform, heading for the landing zone, Crane realized for the first time just how large the oil rig was. The jacket structure alone had to be eight stories high. Its upper deck was covered with a bewildering maze of modular structures. Here and there, men in yellow safety uniforms checked couplings and worked pump equipment, dwarfed by the machinery that surrounded them. Far, far below, the ocean frothed and worried around the pillars of the substructure, where it vanished beneath the surface to run the thousands of feet to the sea floor itself.
The chopper slowed, turned, and settled down onto the green hexagon of the landing zone. As Crane reached back for his bags, he noticed that someone was standing at the edge of the LZ, waiting: a tall, thin woman in an oilskin jacket. He thanked the pilot, opened the passenger door, and stepped out into frigid air, ducking instinctively under the whirring blades.
The woman held out her hand at his approach. “Dr. Crane?”
Crane shook the hand. “Yes.”
“This way, please.” The woman turned and led the way off the landing platform, down a short set of stairs, and along a metal catwalk to a closed, submarine–style hatch. She did not give her name.
A uniformed seaman stood guard outside the hatch, rifle at his side. He nodded as they approached, opened the hatch, then closed and secured it behind them.
Beyond lay a spacious, brightly–lit corridor, studded along both sides with open doors. There was no frantic hum of turbines, no deep throbbing of derrick equipment. The smell of oil, though detectable, was faint, almost as if efforts had been made to remove it.
Crane followed the woman, bags slung over his shoulder, glancing curiously into the rooms as he passed. Once again, curiosity pricked at him: there were laboratories full of whiteboards and workstations; computer centers; communications suites. Topside had been quiet, but there was plenty of activity here.
Crane decided he’d venture a question. “Are the divers in a hyperbaric chamber?” he asked. “Can I see them now?”
“This way, please,” the woman repeated.
They turned a corner, descended a staircase, and entered another hallway, even wider and longer than the first. The rooms they passed were larger here: machine shops, storage bays for high–tech equipment Crane didn’t recognize. Crane frowned. Although Storm King resembled an oil rig in all outward appearances, it was clearly no longer in the business of pumping crude.
What the hell is going on here?
“Have any vascular specialists or pulmonologists been flown in from Iceland?” he asked.
The woman didn’t answer, and Crane shrugged. He’d come this far—he could stand to wait another couple of minutes.
Up ahead, the woman had stopped before a closed door of gray metal. “Mr. Lassiter is waiting for you,” she said.
Lassiter? Crane wondered. That wasn’t a name he recognized. The person who’d spoken to him over the phone, briefed him about the problem at the rig, had been named Simon. He glanced at the door. There was the nameplate, white letters on black plastic, spelling out E. Lassiter, External Liaison.
Crane turned back to the woman in the oilskin jacket, but she was already moving down the corridor. He shifted his bags, knocked on the door.
“Enter,” came the crisp voice from within.
E. Lassiter was a tall, thin man with closely–cropped blond hair. He stood up as Crane entered, came around his desk, shook hands. He wasn’t wearing a military uniform, but with his haircut and his brisk, economical movements he might as well have been. The office was small and just as efficient–looking as its tenant. The desk was almost studiously bare: there was a single manila envelope on it, carefully sealed, and a digital recorder.
“You can stow your gear there,” Lassiter said, indicating a far corner. “Please sit down.”
“Thanks.” Crane took the proffered seat. “I’m eager to learn just what the emergency is. My escort here didn't have much to say on the subject.”
“Actually, neither will I.” Lassiter gave a brief smile, which disappeared as quickly as it came. “That will come. My job is to ask you a few questions.”
Crane digested this. “Go ahead,” he said after a moment.
Lassiter pressed a button on the recorder. “This recording is taking place on June 2. Present are myself—Edward Lassiter—and Dr. Peter Crane. Location is the E. R. F. Support and Supply Station.” Lassiter glanced over the desk at Crane. “Dr. Crane, you are aware that your tour of service here cannot be fixed to a specific length?”
“Yes.”
“And you understand that you must never divulge anything you witness here, or recount your actions while at the Facility?”
“Yes.”
“And are you willing to sign an affidavit to that effect?”
“Yes.”
“Dr. Crane, have you ever been arrested?”
“No.”
“Were you born a citizen of the United States, or are you naturalized?”
“I was born in New York City.”
“Are you taking medication for any ongoing physical condition?”
“No.”
“Do you abuse alcohol or drugs with any regularity?”
Crane had fielded the questions with growing surprise. “Unless you call the occasional weekend six–pack ‘abuse’, then no.”
Lassiter didn’t smile. “Are you claustrophobic, Dr. Crane?”
“No.”
Lassiter put the recorder on pause. Then he picked up the manila envelope, slit it open with a finger, pulled out half a dozen sheets of paper, and passed them across the table. “If you could please read and sign each of these,” he said, plucking a pen from a pocket and placing it beside the sheets.
Crane picked them up and began to read. As he did so, his surprise turned to something close to disbelief. There were three separate non–disclosure agreements, an Official Secrets Act affidavit, and something called a Binding Cooperation Initiative. All were branded documents of the U.S. Government; all required signature; and all threatened dire consequences if any of their articles were breached.
Crane put the documents down. He was uncomfortably aware of Lassiter’s gaze upon him. This was too much. Maybe he should thank Lassiter politely, then excuse himself and head back to Florida.
But how, exactly, was he going to do that? AmShale had already paid a great deal of money to get him here. The helicopter had already left. He was—to put it euphemistically—between research projects at the moment. And besides, he had never been one to turn down a challenge: especially one as mysterious as this.
He picked up the pen and, without giving himself time to reconsider, signed all six documents.
“Thank you,” Lassiter said. He started the recorder again. “Let the transcript show that Dr. Crane has signed the requisite forms.” Then, snapping off the recorder, he stood. “If you'll follow me, Doctor, I think you'll get your answers.”
He led the way out of the office and down the corridor, through a labyrinthine administrative area, up an elevator, and into a well–furnished library, stocked with books, magazines, and computer workstations. Lassiter gestured toward a table on the far side of the room, which held only a computer monitor. “I’ll come back for you,” he said, then turned on his heel and left the room.
Crane sat where directed, watching the door close behind Lassiter. There was nobody else in the library, and he was beginning to wonder what would happen next, when the computer screen winked on in front of him. It showed the face of a grey–haired, deeply tanned man in his late sixties. Some kind of introductory video, Crane thought. But when the face smiled directly at him, he realized he wasn't looking at a computer m...
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Product details
- Publisher : Doubleday (January 30, 2007)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0385515502
- ISBN-13 : 978-0385515504
- Item Weight : 1 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.3 x 1.4 x 9.4 inches
-
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- #1,141 in Technothrillers (Books)
- #4,797 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction
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I figure if you’ve made it this far, you already know with the plot is about, so I won’t waste your time with that.
There are a lot of “ Journey to the bottom of the sea, or journey into space, etc. books”. And in those books everyone usually encounter something bad and can’t get away. End of plot.
But Mr. Child has taken the premise up a few notches! He gives us good character development and really fleshes everybody out. Nothing bothers me more than flat characters. You know what I mean, if you go 30 pages without reading their name you have to flip back to remember who they were. He gives us memorable characters who each have their own stories.
There are about 3 or 4 plot lines going on throughout the book, but it never feels like too many and he wraps them all up by the end of the book. I don’t know about you, but I hated when plot lines feel forced and summer forgotten by the end of the book.
There are numerous things at play in the book and he seems to balance them perfectly. There is a study feeling of suspense and paranoia which makes you want to stay up and read all night.
I would definitely recommend this and all of his other books to anyone who enjoys a good thriller!
There are a lot of “ Journey to the bottom of the sea, or journey into space, etc. books”. And in those books everyone usually encounter something bad and can’t get away. End of plot.
But Mr. Child has taken the premise up a few notches! He gives us good character development and really fleshes everybody out. Nothing bothers me more than flat characters. You know what I mean, if you go 30 pages without reading their name you have to flip back to remember who they were. He gives us memorable characters who each have their own stories.
There are about 3 or 4 plot lines going on throughout the book, but it never feels like too many and he wraps them all up by the end of the book. I don’t know about you, but I hated when plot lines feel forced and summer forgotten by the end of the book.
There are numerous things at play in the book and he seems to balance them perfectly. There is a study feeling of suspense and paranoia which makes you want to stay up and read all night.
I would definitely recommend this and all of his other books to anyone who enjoys a good thriller!
16 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in the United States on September 28, 2020
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I literally finished the book today in a doctor's office. I enjoyed the story, the lead protagonist was interesting. The characters around him were quite good although he never flushed them out fully. There was one really interesting character that had about four sentences in the book and at first I thought he was an hallucination but it turned out he was real. The plot line was OK. You saw through the original plot immediately and assumed it was something else. I think every reader will do that. It turned out to be something completely unexpected, and it is nice to be fooled, although I doubt anyone could have seen it coming. My only problem with the book is that many people, including both heroes and villains die in this book and it would have been nice to go into a little more detail. You just hear that this one died, then that one died, than another one died. I would have liked to hear a bit about how they died and what their last thoughts were. It is like those movies that don't want an R rating so remove all the violence. That was a small thing but after the third or fourth death it became noticeable. In conclusion, I liked it enough to buy another one that featured the same main character.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 30, 2015
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The quality I usually expect from Preston and/or Child. I hesitated a little after first starting this book because I knew I had recently read a novel about an oil rigger in the North Atlantic which was a cover for something going on beneath and I thought maybe I had already read it. No, this was wonderfully different and so much better than the other book (can't remember its title offhand). Peter Crane is led to believe one thing, then another and finally the truth about what is happening at the bottom of the ocean's floor. There is so much security that the reader gets the feeling that it is not necessarily good but that there may be some kind of cover-up. Peter is a Doctor who is brought in to help figured out what is causing the strange sicknesses taking place among the crew. He is like a detective, hunting for the commonality to these illnesses which vary so much that there seems to be nothing in common. Because of the security, at times his hands are tied and has to weigh his signed non-disclosure agreements against the danger that may be present. He walks a fine line between being loyal to his own military allegiance and his desire to help save people. I like all the twists in this book as the reader too is trying to figure out what is really going on in the "facility" under the drilling site. Kept me on the edge of my seat and was brought to an understandable conclusion. One thing I liked was that although there were technical aspects to what was going on, it was more suspense than science fiction so the technology was not too involved for me to understand it.
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Mark Bissett
5.0 out of 5 stars
I loved this book - great read and highly entertaining
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 30, 2019Verified Purchase
Great plot, well executed - I couldn't put the book down and read the whole book in one sitting. You need to enjoy books with a slight science fiction slant and be prepared to suspend belief to an extent. Was the first book I'd read by Douglas Preston and \ or Lincoln Child. Since then, I've gone on to buy and read everything these guys have written. There's not really a bad book in them. First 4 parts of the Agent Predergast series are particularly worth reading as is The Ice Limit and some of the other standalone books.
2 people found this helpful
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HG
3.0 out of 5 stars
Who's Logan then?
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 2, 2019Verified Purchase
I really love Preston & Child writing together, so I now know which of the pair is the weaker writer. This was ok, but nowhere near the thrill and sheer brilliance of story telling of the pair together. Also, this is called, by Amazon, a Jeremy Logan book 1, but there is no character called that (?). I'm also not a fan of "Mysteries under the sea" takes, so that might not have helped my enjoyment. It's not bad, but don't expect the lovely characterisation of an Agent Pendergast!
One person found this helpful
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EMW
5.0 out of 5 stars
Wow
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 5, 2015Verified Purchase
It's been a fair while since I read a gripping book, so feel I must post a review for this. A great read, with the tension and pace of a top thriller. Reminded me of reading Dan Brown Da Vinci code etc. Plot set on an oil rig could easily be messed up/boring but this book really delivers. Before reading I thought it would be another virus outbreak/horror novel, but it's more of a sci-fi thriller. The discovery of Atlantis beneath said oil rig is not what it seems, and a race against time ensues. A great read, not too heavy, and I would read more by this author.
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nimchimpski
5.0 out of 5 stars
Loved it. It isn't great literature
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 28, 2016Verified Purchase
Loved it. It isn't great literature, but it bounces along at a good rate. Enough mystery to pull you along and plenty of detail about life a great ocean depths for those who like that kind of thing. I like that kind of thing.
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Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars
alright gif you have time to WASTE
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on February 16, 2019Verified Purchase
good story but wastes a lot of your time
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