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Loading... Hell's Gate: A Thriller (edition 2016)by Bill Schutt (Author), J. Finch (Author)
Work InformationHell's Gate: A Thriller by Bill Schutt
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. After I discovered that The Himalayan Codex was the sequel to this book could I hardly wait to find time to read the first book. Luckily, my audiobook service had this book so I could start listening to this (yes I had an ARC too, but it's so nice to be able to listen to a book and do other things at the same time). However, now I'm glad that I read The Himalayan Codex before this one because I would never have been interested in The Himalayan Codex after finishing Hell's Gate. This is a typical night and day thing. I have been through it before, one book charms the pants off me, and the next one is meh. This book lacked the thrilling mystery in The Himalayan Codex, and to be perfectly honest couldn't I want for the book to be finished. I did like getting the full background to events mentioned in The Himalayan Codex, but the story in this book was just plain boring. I actually had to turn to my ebook towards the end of the book to read the ending since I kept zoning out while listening to this book. Would I read the third book in this series if there will be one? Yes, I would, just because this story didn't appeal to me can't I deny that I enjoyed the second book and I would love to see what's next for Mac and the rest. Hell’s Gate Author: Bill Schutt and J R Finch Publisher: Bakk Bone LLC Published In: New York City, NY Date: 2016 Pgs: 373 REVIEW MAY CONTAIN SPOILERS Summary: 1944. Missing Army unit in the Amazon. A impossibly big Japanese submarine discovered aground in the jungle. An Axis plot arising in the jungle interior of Amazonia. And a darker force is coming as well. Captain R J MacCready is sent to investigate. Will he be enough? Can he make a difference? Will it be too late by the time those questions are answered? Genre: Adventure Fiction Horror Military Monster Mystery Paranormal Pulp Vampires War Why this book: Jacket reads like a Dirk Pitt novel. ______________________________________________________________________________ Favorite Character: Maurice Voorhees, reluctant, young, Nazi, rocket scientist, drafted away from Peenemunde to work on a project in the Amazonian hinterland of Brazil. Character I Most Identified With: Mama bat creature who is just trying to keep her family fed on the wayward warm blooded creatures who fall into their telempathic embrasure. The Feel: Almost put it down after the description of what happened to MacCready’s family. Heavy handed make the reader care about poor him. Cynical of me, yes, but still true. Feels a bit like the hero is shoehorned into the villainous Nazi plot. The plot pieces are much better than the hero’s journey portion of our program. Uneven, so far. Favorite Scene / Quote: The opening with the “gas” attack on the Russian Army in the Ukraine and the two German soldiers in the Brazilian jungle falling victim to whatever those telepathic jungle vampires are are much better scenes than any scene with MacCready so far. Plot Holes/Out of Character: MacCready and Hendry’s talk when the later gives the former his assignment was supposed to be the easy repartee of acquaintances with a shared history, but it doesn’t ring that way. Feels forced. Tried to consider the conversation against whatever happened with MacCready’s family, but it still doesn’t deliver the character touchstone that, I feel , this was supposed to be. Hmm Moments: Giant intelligent vampire bats with 10 foot wingspans and a hunger for blood. Okay...that’s awesome. And Nazi rocket sleds throwing manned missiles suborbital to rain something down on American cities out of the Amazonian interior of Brazil. ...yeah...that’s cool. Is MacCready going to end up teaming up with telempathic bat people to fight rocket Nazis in the rain forest? With the differences in the MacCready character scenes and the Nazis in the jungle and the bat creature scenes, I wonder if this was originally conceived as Nazis vs bat people and some editor or self-editing lead to needing to include a hero’s journey as part of the story. WTF Moments: MacCready carrying the corpse of the scarlet ibis that got caught in his propeller around with him is gross. ______________________________________________________________________________ Last Page Sound: Kinda wandered around in the denouement positioning characters. Author Assessment: I would read the jacket of more by these authors, not sure if I would pick up the book though. Knee Jerk Reaction: meh! Disposition of Book: Irving Public Library South Campus Irving, TX Dewey Decimal System: F SCH Would recommend to: no one ______________________________________________________________________________ no reviews | add a review
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"1944. As war rages in Europe and the Pacific, Army Intel makes a shocking discovery: a 300-foot Japanese sub marooned and empty, deep in the Brazilian interior. A team of Army Rangers sent to investigate has already gone missing. Now, the military sends Captain R.J. MacCready, a wisecracking, brilliant scientific jack-of-all-trades to learn why the Japanese are there-and what they're planning. Parachuting deep into the heart of Central Brazil, one of the most remote regions on the planet, Mac is unexpectedly reunited with his hometown friend and fellow scientist Bob Thorne. A botanist presumed dead for years, Thorne lives peacefully with Yanni, an indigenous woman who possesses mysterious and invaluable skills. Their wisdom and expertise are nothing short of lifesaving for Mac as he sets out on a trail into the unknown. Mac makes the arduous trek into an ancient, fog-shrouded valley hidden beneath a 2000-foot plateau, where he learns of a diabolical Axis plot to destroy the United States and its allies. But the enemy isn't the only danger in this treacherous jungle paradise. An even darker force is on the prowl, attacking at night and draining the blood of livestock and human prey. Mac has to uncover the source of this emerging biological crisis and foil the enemy's plans ... but will he be in time to save humanity from itself?"-- No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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This is a typical night and day thing. I have been through it before, one book charms the pants off me, and the next one is meh. This book lacked the thrilling mystery in The Himalayan Codex, and to be perfectly honest couldn't I want for the book to be finished. I did like getting the full background to events mentioned in The Himalayan Codex, but the story in this book was just plain boring. I actually had to turn to my ebook towards the end of the book to read the ending since I kept zoning out while listening to this book.
Would I read the third book in this series if there will be one? Yes, I would, just because this story didn't appeal to me can't I deny that I enjoyed the second book and I would love to see what's next for Mac and the rest. ( )