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Trojan Odyssey (Dirk Pitt Adventure) by Clive Cussler
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Clive Cussler Edition: Mass Market Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 2004-11-30 ISBN: 0425199320 Number of pages: 480 Publisher: Berkley
Book Reviews of Trojan Odyssey (Dirk Pitt Adventure)Book Review: Weak Summary: 2 Stars
Clive Cussler novels have always been page-turners. I once had to buy
a hardcover copy of "Inca Gold" after reading the first few pages in a
bookstore; I was so drawn into the story there was no way I could wait
for the paperback. Throughout the years, I've thoroughly enjoyed
reading every Dirk Pitt book through "Valhalla Rising."
I stopped reading Cussler after buying one of his "with Paul Kemprecos"
titles. Having lost interest in that tome after reading about four
pages, the author's books dropped off my radar.
Recently, I found "Trojan Odyssey," and bought it immediately when I
saw there was no co-author. The perfect vacation read, me thinks.
I never noticed the prose before when reading a Dirk Pitt tale; the
stories just flowed, and the writing never got in the way.
Unfortunately the writing in "Trojan Odyssey" kept hitting me in the
face like a splintery board. It was hard to see past it to follow
the oh-so-thin plot. The first half of the book was the worst; it
read like a Hardy Boys book, one penned by a particularly talentless
ghostwriter. Clearly no one who could even spell "editor" looked at
that part of the text before publication. It didn't help that I
twigged to several major elements of the plot in about 20 nanoseconds.
The writing improved noticably in the second half of the book, nearly
reaching the level of a mid-tier Hardy Boys. Surmounting the stilted
dialog was still a struggle, but at least some of the subplots were
enjoyable.
Years ago, readers of the last Travis McGee novel were surprised (as
was he) by the appearance of his adult child at the end of the book.
I remember thinking this could be the death knell for a series about a
free-spirited adventurer. Unfortunately, due to the untimely passing
of John D. MacDonald, we never got to find out. It was certainly
deja vu when Dirk Pitt's adult twins turned up at the end of "Valhalla
Rising." Reading "Trojan Odyssey" we get a sense of what might have
been in store for the McGee franchise.
As a man of a certain age facing the realities of getting older, I
want to escape into a character who has heroic adventures, harrowing
scrapes and dalliances with beautiful women. I'm not so interested
in reading about a character of a certain age facing the realities of
getting older. In theory Pitt's progeny could pick up the slack, but
only if they weren't so lame.
I'm willing to cough up ten!!! bucks for a well-crafted adventure story
of the quality of the previous Dirk Pitt novels. One actually written
by the person whose name appears on the cover, and edited by someone
with at least a passing familiarity with English. One that doesn't
force me to grit my teeth and plow through its surprisingly large type
by sheer force of will. One that doesn't leave me feeling cheated, as
this one did.
Now that the diatribe is over, I want to return to the earlier Dirk
Pitt novels for a minute. I think the series peaked with "Sahara,"
but all the books through "Atlantis Found" are a ripping great read
if you like adventure stories. "Valhalla Rising" is also recommended,
but the "Pitt feels angst about getting old and starts behaving like
a responsible adult" theme is a little depressing.
Summary of Trojan Odyssey (Dirk Pitt Adventure)Long hailed as the grand master of adventure fiction, Clive Cussler has continued to astound with the intricate plotting and astonishing set pieces of his novels. Now, with a surprising twist, he gives us his most audacious work yet. In the final pages of Valhalla Rising, Dirk Pitt discovered, to his shock, that he had two grown children he had never known-twenty-three-year-old fraternal twins born to a woman he thought had died in an underwater earthquake. Both have inherited his love of the sea: the girl, Summer, is a marine biologist; the boy, himself named Dirk, is a marine engineer. And now they are about to help their father in the adventure of a lifetime. There is a brown tide infesting the ocean off the shore of Nicaragua. The twins are working in a NUMA(r) underwater enclosure, trying to determine its origin, when two startling things happen: Summer discovers an artifact, something strange and beautiful and ancient; and the worst storm in years boils up out of the sky, heading straight not only for them but also for a luxurious floating resort hotel square in its path. The peril for everybody concerned is incalculable, and, desperately, Pitt, Al Giordino, and the rest of the NUMA(r) crew rush to the rescue, but what they find in the storm's wake makes the furies of nature pale in comparison. For there is an all-too-human evil at work in that part of the world, and the brown tide is only a by-product of its plan. Soon, its work will be complete-and the world will be a very different place. Though if Summer's discovery is to be believed, the world is already a very different place...
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