Deep Fathom Audiobook By James Rollins cover art

Deep Fathom

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Deep Fathom

By: James Rollins
Narrated by: John Meagher
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“[Rollins] will make your toes curl and your free hand clutch the armchair as you speed through the pages.”
Tampa Tribune

“James Rollins knows adventure.”
Chicago Sun Times

A sensational early work from “one of the most inventive storytellers writing today” (Lincoln Child)—the third pulse-pounding adventure novel from perennial New York Times bestselling thrill-master James Rollins—Deep Fathom is an extraordinary story of desperate survival and mysterious discoveries. The acclaimed creator of Sigma Force seamlessly combines action, science, lore, and breathtaking suspense in this classic tale of a lost civilization and a wondrous journey to a beguiling world beneath the sea. Part Michael Crichton, part Douglas Preston, part Indiana Jones, yet completely, exhilaratingly Rollins, Deep Fathom is an undersea roller coaster ride that never slows down from the first page through the explosive climax.

Action & Adventure Fantasy Fiction Mystery, Thriller & Suspense Science Fiction Suspense Thriller & Suspense Natural Disaster Exciting
Thrilling Adventure • Detailed Visualization • Good Acting Chops • Vivid Characters • Unpredictable Plot

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Great story, as always, from Rollins. And thoroughly enjoyed John Meagher's performance. We will look for more of his work.

Excellent!

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This was a good book! Very suspenseful and mysterious! Easy to listen to and get lost in the adventure with a bit of romance!

Great underwater adventure

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If you are looking for lyrical, beautiful writing, then you should skip James Rollins: He is no James Lee Burke or Cormac McCarthy. If you are looking for realistic believability, then you should skip James Rollins: He will 𝑎𝘭𝘸𝑎𝘺𝘴 stretch your suspension-of-disbelief capacity to its breaking point. There. Now, if you still have some curiosity about "Deep Fathom," read on ... because it just might justify your spending a credit.

This third Rollins thriller pushes credibility to the limit, same as its predecessors do. However, if you listen without judging, you will see that Rollins has done his research before commencing his wild conjecturing ... and Rollins has the intelligence to research thoroughly and conjecture (just barely) plausibly. I think that, when we close our minds to wild possibilities -- believing that we already know how the world works -- then we also close ourselves from understanding and joy. Just think about some of the completely unbelievable discoveries of quantum physics -- the "cloud" of probability, Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, quantum entanglement, the puzzling dual nature of light -- they all surpass our understanding -- toppling Newtonian physics to its foundations -- yet still stand up to mathematical rigor. Rollins investigates these ideas that go beyond our minds' boundaries, and uses them to craft near-fantasy thrillers. In so doing, he exhibits his true genius: imagination.

With "Deep Fathom," Rollins explores the mysterious realms of Dark Energy and Dark Matter, applying them to South Pacific legends of a lost continent and a "Bermuda Triangle" antipode. Far-fetched, eh? Maybe so; but, on the other hand ... his conjectures do explain the mysterious, real-life pattern of ship disappearances in the South Pacific ....

As for this audiobook's reader, John Meagher, I don't quite understand some other reviewers' strong antipathy for him. Yes, he has a slightly reedy, tenor voice -- not our ideal masculine baritone, and, perhaps, not the ideal voice for these thriller novels -- but, at least, Meagher doesn't speak nasally (which annoys 𝘮𝘦); and he has pretty good acting chops. Contrary to other reviewers' assertions, I find that he does a reasonably good job of distinguishing the characters' voices. I suggest listening to the sample that Audible provides, since people have such different voice-preferences. If you don't mind Meagher's voice, and don't mind a bit of wild imagination, then take a chance with this audiobook. It shows a now-famous author just beginning to hit his stride.

Rollins Just Beginning to Hit His Stride ...

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I have read this book before. Decent but farfetched story. Biggest problem is the narrator needs major work on his female voices. The two main females sounded like naieve whining teenage girls. Very difficult to listen to; had to start and stop multiple times.

Narrator made it tough

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Alright as a narrator John Meagher, at the time of this writing, has 7 audio books to his credit that I could find. Now Dick Hill 340 + audio books, Scott Brick 335 +, Stefan Rudnicki 230 +, we expect a great listening experience from them. Hopefully John Meagher will improve on the next read that he dose James Rollins. Now Deep Fathom kept me engrossed. I would have said it was a page turner, but it's an audiobook. So... I just had to keep listening. James... thank you for an engaging store.

I just had to keep listening

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