By New York Times best-selling author Bob Mayer writing as Robert Doherty (author of the best-selling Area 51 series)
Over 1,000,000 copies sold! Amazon Hot 100 in print. Amazon Top 10 in Thriller.
What if the Shadow that destroyed Atlantis 10,000 years ago, comes back to threaten our present world? A war beyond time. An enemy beyond space. A thriller beyond your wildest dreams.
Three areas on the Earth's surface defy explanation: the Bermuda Triangle, the Devil's Sea of Japan, and a small region of Cambodia. Inside these realms, planes have disappeared, ships have vanished, and, in Cambodia, an entire civilization has been lost leaving behind Angkor Wat. In the present, former Green Beret Eric Dane teams up with the mysterious Sin Fen, a woman with powers he can't quite understand to fight the dark Shadow threatening the world.
In the year 1,000 AD, a fearsome Viking Warrior, must protect a Seer from Valkyries, Kraken and other forces of legend and help her on a quest that connects through mysterious gates to Dane's battle in the present. All around the planet, at the junction of ley lines, and where tectonic plates join, black gates are opening, letting the dark Shadow into our world, threatening the very planet itself. Can Dane, Sin Fen, the Viking and the Seer, combine forces across a millennium to save the planet?
If you enjoyed LOST, you'll love this book and be amazed at the similarities in concept (although this book was published before Lost).
©2012 Bob Mayer (P)2012 Bob Mayer
"Spell-binding! Will keep you on the edge of your seat. Call it techno-thriller, call it science fiction, call it just terrific story-telling." (Terry Brooks, #1 New York Times best-selling author of the Shannara series and Star Wars Phantom Menace)
"an effort to listen"
No and Yes. Yes to read and No to listen. The narration was aggravating just as it was in the first book.
It follows well from the first book and keeps the excitement going despite the monotone and lifeless reader.
no
I would have read the book had I known the reading was so bad.
Please review these readings before they are published.
"Great story, terrible narration"
I'm really getting into Mayer's work. He's a terrific author, but again this reading has been let down by terrible narration.
Hayes reads the story at a lethargic pace with no emphasis on urgency regardless of how chaotic the scene for the protagonists. All the strong female characters come across like little girls asking kindly if they could go to play in the park.
Certainly doesn't do Mayers great writing any favours. That said, I'm really looking forward to the later books in the series.
"Sequel"
Never read the book
Tam Noc
J.C. I thought did a better job holding the various voices together in the second book.
I liked the book, it held me well enough for the finally, I think others will enjoy it.
Way too much explaination of events from the first book. It almost seemed like the author was filling in space to make the book longer by adding very detailed accounts of the characters history from the first book.The book is a great perspective of the Atantis story, the dialog is a little predictable but it is not enough of a distraction to give the book bad marks.