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It's a typical Ken Follett novel
Just another review
Unforgetable Spy NovelKen Follet
Henry Faber alias, The Needle, is a German spy who works for Germany during World War II. He is tall, handsome, intelligent, well built, German aristocrat who works fast, in a shrewd manner, cleanly, and without leaving a trace. He is very close to Hitler. When a person becomes a danger to his identity or whereabouts, he uses an "stilletto" to utterly kill without almost any evidence.
The Needle or Die Nadle, discovers a British military secret that if given to the Germans on time would, no question about it, make the Germans win the war. Then the British find out about it, then starts the run, hide and go of The needle. All the Allied and British military intelligence are looking for him with no results But nobody but a woman, Lucy Rose, who lives in a stormy and far away island , can get to him...
The novel is excellently written and keeps the reader interested until the end. It also depicts all the knowledge about military intelligence, spies and world War II that the author masters.
I strongly recommend this book as a novel to entertain, and "A Place Called Freedom", also written by Ken Follet


Dash Of Music and AA History Add Spice to Mystery Thriller!Silent Conspiracy by Lee Meadow was required reading for my BookClub. Though, an avid mystery reader, I must admit that it took me much longer than expected to get into the storyline. The initiative narrative was detailed and flat and did not start off with a bang or a WOW...however; I stuck with the book and I became more engrossed as the plot thickened.
Silent Conspiracy is the first in the series of Lincoln Keller mysteries... Silent Conspiracy is a plot twisting and turning novel about the mysterious disappearance of the Five Sentiments, a popular singing group who has been missing for 40 years. Lincoln Keller, the private investigator was hired by the beautiful Erotica to find the group. Erotica was determined to grant her dying husband this last wish to reunite with his friends once again. Lincoln goes on wild goose chases and is able to discover more in 24 hours than most folks have found out about the Missing Sentiments in years and appears to be getting close to finding out what happened. As such, folk(s) start to run scared and along the way Lincoln meets a cast of characters who want him out of the way as it appears that someone wants to let sleeping dogs lay. Enough clues are given along the way that soon the pieces of the puzzle begin to fit together...and it's more than just the story of the Missing Sentiments.
Once I got past the first 50 pages, I was hooked and as such I give Mr. Meadows 4 Stars for his first mystery novel attempt. Though parts of the plot may stretch the limits of credulity and dialogue seems a little flat in places, this still is a wonderfully crafted, intriguing and suspenseful thriller with a dash of Music and African American History for spice.
Mystery and History in Detroit
A Great Debut Mystery Novel!

Another Look at LincolnMr. Donald never misses an opportunity to describe Lincoln as "ugly" or "homely" and uses comments from others on several occasions to do this. It seems that Mr. Donald uses the book to cast the former President in a not-so-flattering light at times, and to offer an interpretation of him that some Americans will not be comfortable with. Perhaps this was his plan, and casts Lincoln more as a human being than the monolith he sometimes is described as. It certainly gives us another look at Lincoln, and made an important contribution to my understanding of him. I am keeping Mr. Donald's volume in perspective with all else I have studied about Lincoln, and using it to further piece together my image of him.
Mr. Donald's place as an eminent historian and his overall reverence for Lincoln is apparant. This is an important work that should not be missed, but keep the volume in perspective as an interpretation of one author and seek other volumes to cast a more complete picture. Any student of history should do this and I doubt that Mr. Donald would disagree.
Just the FactsThere is much I admire in this book, but feel that it lacks the warmth and narrative felicity that make a chronicle of a life really come alive. Throughout, Donald uses "Lincoln"-never "Abe" or even "Abraham". It's a small thing, but it contributes to the book's impersonal tone. Moreover, he almost never describes Abe Lincoln's feelings, and only occasionally touches on his personal life, such as his relations with Mary, or how he reacted to the deaths of his sons. Lincoln comes to seem a man almost independent of his environment-certainly indifferent to food or comfort, or, we suspect, love-whose real passion is for the machinations of politics. However, the author does make credible Lincoln's moral and political greatness; he just does not quite give us a feel for the man. It sounds like Donald's more recent book, "Lincoln at Home", could be the ideal companion volume to this one.
David Herbert Donal's LINCOLN - 'a classic'

Brilliant work of historical fictionI saw Gore Vidal's Lincoln on TV in the late 80s played by Sam Waterson and Mary Tyler Moore. At that time I remember thinking of it as a very interesting movie, but did not connect it to the American Chronicle series that Gore Vidal authored.
Reading this book, the TV movie comes better to light (and I am now quite urgently trying to dig it up!).
The book itself is characterized by several wonderful elements:
Firstly, Gore Vidal is a splendid writer. The way he scripts his words, the way he sets up the scenes and the psychological probing of his characters are all scintillating.
Secondly, the subject of this novel is so towering, that the reader can be forgiven for wondering if a novel can do him justice. Gore Vidal achieves that feat - he manages to present Lincoln foremost as a master politician, a leader for his times, a compassionate, wily, honest, determined and utterly human.
Finally, it is quite amazing how many of Lincoln's senior officers (Chase, Seward, McClellan) were gunning for his office. How Lincoln manages all these competing political forces is a compelling reading.
There is enough mythology sorrounding Lincoln, without having to have fiction written around him and circumstances of the civil war. But Gore Vidal's purpose is quite genuine and sincere - taking a fictional tack frees him up to probe Lincoln the man and all the characters and circumstances he had to deal with with much more freedom and creativity - the result is a plausible, yet utterly delightful account of America's arguably greatest President.
This book will be one my prized possesions on my bookshelf.
A lively portait of one of our greatest leaders
Fascinating and believable

An Acquitance with Ann RinaldiThe book's main character (whom you've probably already found out) is fourteen year old Emily Pigbrush, who experiences through many tragic events. First her widow mother dies and she decides to live with her best friend, Annie Surratts. But on the night before she moves out the greatest of all misfortunes happen - President Lincoln gets shot and suspicion falls on the Surratts. Forced to go and live with Uncle Valentine, Emily finds out more as to why her mother hated her brother so much. As to the rest, you really should find out yourself. In the end the story leaves you a strange feeling. One that signals the end but it leaves you kind of sad. Over all it's a great book.
Everything Expected from Ann Rinaldi!
A great mystery and history book!

well written and fast pacedIn addition, Preston and Child do an excellent job of writing women. They do not fall into the trap of describing female characters in terms of her long legs and breast size that seems so typical in these sort of novels. Nora Kelly, first introduced in Thunderhead, is a believable woman and museum professional. I think female readers will appreciate this apparently unique view in a male dominated genre.
The book left me with only one pressing question: When is the next one coming out????
Pendergrast fans will love this book. Make sure to read the alternate ending posted on the official webpage:
intelligent thriller, great settings and charactersIn this not-quite-contemporary setting (only one person has a cell phone, for instance), New Orleans FBI Special Agent Pendergast is inexplicably interested in the recent discovery of a charnel beneath a New York construction site. He builds a team of assistants: Nora Kelly, Utahan archaeologist determined to make a go of her once-in-a-lifetime chance at working at the world's greatest natural history museum; William Smithback, reporter aching for a Pulitzer (and a suit worthy of the acceptance ceremony); Patrick O'Shaughnessy, a sergeant in the NY Police Department, fifth generation cop at the mercy of a cruel and petty precinct captain; Proctor, his invisible and indispensable chauffeur.
These main characters, excepting Proctor, are well fleshed out and engaging, while Pendergast himself is an intriguing variant on the Sherlock Holmes-style detective. (These characters appear in other books by the same authors.) A healthy field of minor characters are also three-dimensional. Settings are vivid and evocative. Dialogue flows naturally. And bonus -- I even learned a little about urban archaeology and the scientific/fantastical collections of the title.
Very well done. I'm anxious to read more from these authors and to read more about these characters. If you are interested in an intelligent thriller rooted in NYC history, you will probably enjoy this too. If you like Caleb Carr, Iain Pears or Jack Finney, you will likely appreciate this masterful and gripping mystery.
Another great novel from a great teamPreston and Child are masters of the just one more chapter school of writing. They use multiple storylines that make it hard to stop: just as you get to a critical "I need to know what happens" point, they switch to the other storyline, and it makes it so you can't stop.
This one starts out simply enough as the archaeological investigation of a century old serial killer, but as with all of their novels, there is a scientific-fantasical explanation in store for us. We are treated to sub-basements, old houses, museum archives, and old family secrets. For the true Preston-Child fan, we find out about Pendergast's background (finally!), and for the first-timer, you get the joy of discovering one of the best thriller writing teams of all. A special note to fans of Preston-Child, check out Michael Connelly's The Poet! You'll love it.


Not that great discoveryThe story is fast told. An expedition searchs for an old Indian city, which is legendary in archeological circles. Strange events seem to make the expedition fail. People die, etc.
The characters include the enthusiastic female leader, the arrogant specialist, the cool cowboy, the joking journalist and a shy scientist. There are some more, but, hey aren't it enough already? I surely don't mind a book with many characters. But it's obvious here that Preston and Child had too much do with all of them. Most of them stay so straight in their roles, you're never surprised about them. Other change their habits so often, you don't have a clue who they really are. The perfect example for this is Sloane, the daughter of the institute's boss, who also join the expedition. She is good and evil equally somehow. Some pseudo-psychological explanations don't help a lot.
The story itself doesn't deliver much to tell about. Searching the city, finding the city, exploring the city. That's about it. If you thought the previous books were scientific wait for this one. There is so much talk about archology you have to be a bit interested, or otherwise you fall asleep.
I am interested in the topic and it was another reason why I disliked it. The explanations are sometimes laughable and the message it delivers about science is nearly dangerous.
Besides that there are so many things that make you go "What?" it's too much really. Can anyone tell me how you can hear "the sound of a ladder being put on a wall"?
Despite all this the book somehow is suspenseful. The quality doesn't vary that much through it. It's really average, exciting and suspenseful, but average all through it.
Not to Be MissedThroughout much of the first two-thirds of Thunderhead readers almost have to remind themselves that the book is actually fiction, it seems so real. Thunderhead is extremely well researched. Throughout the novel readers will be treated to a wealth of knowledge about the ancient Anasazi culture: everything we do know about them, don't know about them, and the latest scientific controversy-- did the Anasazi engage in cannibalism? The history and geology of the area plays an important role in the story as does other American Native beliefs and religion. A lot of attention is given to Indian beliefs as they pertain to witchcraft: skinwalkers and plants that produce hallucinogenic drugs. Indeed, in an afterward, the authors site the fact that Douglas Preston traveled and lived among the southwestern Indian people and has written about them. There are repeated references to Howard Carter's discovery of King Tut's tomb, Schliemann's discovery of Troy, and the Wetherill brothers' discovery of the ancient cliff dwellings at Mesa Verde, Colorado.
The last portion of Thunderhead becomes more of a traditionally plot-driven adventure thriller with catastrophe, death, murder, and evil running amuck. Thunderhead is one of the best adventure novels to see the light of day for quite sometime. Readers who have any knowledge of or have ever ventured to the Southwest and have fallen under the allure and mystic beauty of the area, especially of the ancient cliff dwellings, will have their imaginations rekindled anew. The nearly 500 pages of Thunderhead will flow through the reader's fingers as swiftly as the current in the waters of a flashflood headed for the Colorado River. And like those flood waters, it is a roller coaster ride filled with thrills and surprises until the very satisfying conclusion. This is a tale not to be missed. END
Thunderhead delivers it all!

Deaver continues to surprise, enchant and enthrall readersSo what do you call it when the literary master of misdirection and illusion writes a book about misdirection and illusion? Well, I guess you can call it THE VANISHED MAN. THE VANISHED MAN takes place over the course of two days. It begins with a rapid series of seemingly unrelated murders by a mastermind who comes to be known as The Conjurer --- he commits the murders'and vanishes. Lincoln Rhyme, the brilliant New York criminologist, is brought in as a consultant and Amelia Sachs is of course there with him, functioning as his legs and eyes at the crime scene, doing what he cannot.
Rhyme deduces fairly rapidly that they are dealing with someone who has a background in magic. Happenstance results in an apprentice illusionist, who goes by the stage name of "Kara," being brought onto the team as a consultant. Rhyme arrives at a conclusion regarding the identity of the vanished man, but his motive remains a mystery. Is it vengeance? Is it murder-for-hire? Or is it something so diabolical that the team can't imagine it? All that Rhyme and Sachs know for certain is that they are all too quickly running out of time.
Deaver's craftsmanship is first-rate as always and his research into the professional world of magic and illusion is not only informative but also compelling. One cannot read THE VANISHED MAN without wishing to learn more about the craft. And Deaver makes that easy as well, dropping factoids about sourcebooks and museums. He simultaneously advances the lives of his characters just a bit --- there are disappointments and surprises for Sachs in the offing. Deaver may have also tipped his hand as to the subject matter of Rhyme's next case --- and Deaver's next book. Most of all, however, Deaver with THE VANISHED MAN continues to surprise, enchant and enthrall.
--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
One helluva a ride!Like all his previous books, Deaver grabs you on the first page and doesn't let go until the last page. I honestly couldn't figure out where the story was going until the very end.
In true Deaver fashion the book is loaded with twists and surprises. Just when you think it's over Deaver throws another curveball at you.
And that is the only real complaint about the book. There were just to many twists. It feels like Deaver wanted to top himself and just kept adding on one surprise after another. Another complaint I have is the whole subplot dealing with Sachs promotion. I don't think it needed to be there and it took away from the main story.
I will still wholeheartedly recommend 'The Vanished Man'. Even a flawed Deaver book is better than many other thrillers out there today!
Magical mystery mind-twisterRhyme and his protégé (and lover) police detective Amelia Sachs require a little help on this one - an enthusiastic young apprentice magician, Kara, who explains the tricks and delivers some of her own. The plot takes center stage with its split-second timing and double-triple-quadruple twists, buttressed by Kara's dissection of the tricks, particularly the psychology behind audience deception. And sure enough, more than once, Rhyme outsmarts himself.
A white-supremacist sub-plot folds cleverly into the mix and the story is fleshed out with Rhyme's physical challenges, Sachs' ambitions and Kara's relationship with her sick mother. A dazzling show, this one will fool you to the last page.


Special Agent Pendergast takes a vacation to Kansas...A body found in the forest. Mutilated, surrounded by Indian artifacts and dead crows. The local sheriff, Dent Hazen, believes it to be a one-time incident, maybe a drifter. But Pendergast believes it to be the work of a serial killer, one that lives within the town...
The Agent enlists the help of eighteen-year-old misfit Corrie Swanson. As Pendergast's driver and assistant, Corrie is shown things that she had never believed possible...things that just might put her next on the killer's list.
Medicine Creek is about to get famous. A university has decidecd to put an experimental cornfield somewhere in the county, and most people in Creek hope it goes there. With pressure from the town's few wealthy citizens, Sheriff Hazen is forced to make changes in his investigation, like getting rid of Pendergast, and honing in on a "suspect"...changes that may cost him, and the rest of the townspeople, their lives.
Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child score again. In a novel better than any since RELIC, Preston/Child bring Special Agent Pendergast--with only a hint at his first name--to the forefront once more in this harrowing mystery-thriller.
Don't be put off by claims that the identity of the villain is a letdown. True, it is kind of surprising--and not as climatic as these guys' other novels--but it makes sense when you think about it, and you'll never suspect a thing until the very end.
STILL LIFE WITH CROWS is a must-read for mystery/suspense fans. Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child have a knack of bringing you into the novel with the first word, and never--not once in the four-hundred-odd pages--let you go.
A creepy page-turner.A body has been found, mutilated beyond recognition, and positioned elaborately in a corn field. The local police rules this as a single murder, until Special Agent Pendergast arrives and declares this the work of a serial killer.
Within hours the small town is swarming with reporters, and the local residents are in fear for their lives.
Pendergast begins investigating the crimes with only the clues of crows(a twisted secret you need to read the book to understand) to help, but when he teams with Corrie Swanson he will come face to face with an evil he is not prepared for.
'Still Life With Crows' is a creepy thriller that starts off fast and keeps the twists coming. The surprises start as the plot develops, and as the pieces of the puzzle fall into place you are held captive. Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child pack their story with thrills and chills while maintaining a cinematic flair reminiscent to that of 80's horror films. I couldn't stop reading once the book was started, and the ending blew me away.
An entertaining summer read that will be surely land on the bestseller list's, 'Still Life With Crows' further proves Preston and Child masters of original horror tales.
Nick Gonnella
Ahhhh....how can you not love Agent Pendergast?With his Goth Girl Friday, Corrie (a reluctant resident of Medicine Creek) Pendergast unravels the knot of clues left by our unknown killer.
Preston/Child weave a fantastic, gory tale of suspense that will keep you turning pages well into the wee hours of the morning. I can't wait to read more adventures of Agent Pendergast, if only to unravel the mysteries of the man himself. We know almost nothing of this suave Southern FBI agent, and that in itself is worth the read. He is full of surprises, with his archaic speech and gentlemanly manners. If you liked this book, I highly suggest reading "Relic", "Reliquary" and "Cabinet of Curiosities".


An average novelThe story revolves around a top secret facility which is believed to be devloping a secret weapon. Two scientists discover the truth behind what is being developed and tested at the facility and soon are on the run. All along, they are aided by persons outside the facility, one of which knows the mastermind personally.
The book starts like most Preston and Child books -- at a rapid pace. However, until the mystery starts to unravel, the pace becomes too slow. The book then picks up again when the truth behind Mount Dragon is discovered. Then, the last third of the book involves the heroes on the run which is too long and drawn out. The confrontation between the mastermind and his adversary in a virtual world is highly entertaining, even though it does seem to be a bit out of place.
Overall, if you like the other works by Preston and Child, you will probably enjoy this one. If you're a fan of science thrillers and haven't read any of their works, read "Riptide" or "The Ice Limit" as they are better works with little to no slow points in the storyline.
Another Preston and Child rompThe one element of the story that is irritatingly hackneyed is the all too predictable inclusion of a brainy young female who happens to have lovely, long legs and smoldering violet eyes. Keeping one eye to the potential of the book as Hollywood material, the authors also made sure to include a kind of absurdly gratuitous sex scene toward the end of the book. Ho hum. Otherwise, this is a smart, creative, and well-presented novel that is sure to keep its readers turning the pages in anticipation of what happens next.
I could not put this book down.The biohazard novel is nothing new. However, these two authors have managed to transform it into a gripping, realistic story. They are similar to Michael Crichton in that they take actual science, stretch the bounds of reality a little, and come up with something so believable that it's scary. The story they've crafted around the science is a wonder to read. The characters are believable, the story is gripping, and the climax is fulfilling. I would recommend this book to anybody who's into science thrillers or action movies.
This novel fits the mold perfectly - the characters are more or less drawn from the stock characters of action/adventure/intrigue stories - the icy cold and thoroughly competent enemy spy, the intellectual, professorial good guy who somehow manages to stay one step behind the spy throughout the story, and the beautiful and thoroughly unqualified female who implausibly saves the day at the last minute.
The general plot is that a German spy has discovered the disinformation campaign that the Allies are using to divert attention from the preparation for D-Day. There is a race to capture or kill him before he can communicate the information to his masters in Berlin.
The book is the literary equivalent of a candy bar. It's not intellectually nourishing or nutritious, but it's a great way to kill some time.