Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Angel of Vengeance (Volume 22) (Agent Pendergast Series) (edition 2024)by Douglas Preston (Author)
Work InformationAngel of Vengeance by Douglas Preston
Books Read in 2024 (3,622) mom (684) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. The Pendergast series is among my favorites.....Preston and Child never disappoint. This latest addition just highlights all the reasons I love this series.....historically accurate, entertaining, thrilling, etc. This book brings an end to the Leng story. I look forward to the next Pendergast adventure. ( ) Angel of Vengeance is Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child book wherein they have done it again. The SciFi Pendergast thriller has believable portions. The good guys are good and the bad guys are very bad. Research went into medicines during the 19th century. Time machine travel is always interesting to ask, "what if one could?" Here the authors answered that question with their characters. Five stars were given to this book, as it is just a good story. Gosh, I hate to say this, but Angel of Vengeance is strikingly average. Preston and Child rank in the top five of my favorite authors and I put them on a pedestal. In addition, I have read every book in the Pendergast series so I feel qualified to share my thoughts about this novel. The beginning will be a mess for those who didn't read the previous book (The Cabinet of Dr. Leng) because it picks up right where the last one left off. Pendergast, D' Agosta, Constance, and Diogenes all find themselves apparently trapped in the 1880s when the portal they used to get to that time has been destroyed. As begun in the previous book, the quartet has traveled back in time to stop the evil deeds of distant Pendergast relative, Dr. Enoch Leng. With that said, there's very little action in the first third of the book creating a level of excitement equivalent to that of putting out the family dinnerware before supper. Because of this, the book is a slog to get through. It's only after the quartet devise a plot to finally get at Leng (taking place in the last half of the story) that the book begins to get interesting. It's actually pretty riveting in the last third of the book, but that's not enough to make this more than a 3 star story for this reviewer. I feel like I'm a little tough on the authors (and I'm sure that many readers will disagree with me) but if P & C would have spent more time on plot development and less on throwing out their $5 words interspersed with the vernacular of the 1880s, then this would have been a better story. This book brings an end to the Leng trilogy, so hopefully, better storylines are ahead for Pendergast fans. In this reviewer's humble opinion, P & C need to bring back more of the original snarky, aloof, and mysterious Pendergast, and less of the warm and relatively fuzzy Pendergast from the past 4 or 5 novels. I'm hopeful that the series isn't running out of steam, but I'm worried. Thanks to NetGalley for providing me an ARC of this novel in exchange for an honest review. Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child’s Angel of Vengeance picks up where The Cabinet of Dr. Leng left off. FBI Special Agent Aloysius Pendergast, NYPD Detective Vincent D’Agosta, and Pendergast’s former ward Constance Greene find themselves trapped in the 1890s. Similar to Michael Crichton’s Timeline, the device they used did not send them back to their own past but rather a parallel world that nearly duplicates their own other than existing more than a century behind. Constance’s efforts to save the parallel world’s version of her younger self and her siblings from Dr. Enoch Leng’s ministrations failed, with the wayward Pendergast relative now aware of her actions and the fact that a version of himself succeeded in perfecting the arcanum. Though Constance feels all is lost, an unlikely ally appears in the form of Diogenes Pendergast, Aloysius’ wayward younger brother who is criminally insane and who Constance rejected in the events of The Obsidian Chamber. Leng is their most dangerous enemy yet due to his intelligence and utter lack of scruples. As another member of the Pendergast family, he thinks just as Aloysius and Diogenes do. Even Constance learned from him in her own world. With the children’s lives at stake as well as the very future of the world to which they’ve traveled, Pendergast, D’Agosta, Constance, and Diogenes divide their efforts to throw Leng off their scent while knowing that he is similarly making plans to advance his own goals and counter his opponents. Preston and Child ably employ a Xanatos Gambit to great effect in a story that perfectly uses every page to resolve the narrative they began so many years ago. Angel of Vengeance is a solid thriller and well-worth the wait since The Cabinet of Dr. Leng. Further, its connections back to some of their best Pendergast stories including The Cabinet of Curiosities and the Diogenes Trilogy work to its advantage. no reviews | add a review
"A desperate bargain is broken... Constance Greene confronts Manhattan's most dangerous serial killer, Enoch Leng, bartering for her sister's life - but she is betrayed and turned away empty-handed, incandescent with rage. A clever trap is set... Unknown to Leng, Pendergast's brother, Diogenes, appears unexpectedly, offering to help-for mysterious reasons of his own. Disguised as a cleric, Diogenes establishes himself in New York's notorious Five Points slum, manipulating events like a chess master, watching Leng's every move...and awaiting his own chance to strike. A vengeful angel will not be deterred... Meanwhile, as Pendergast focuses on saving the unstable Constance in her fanatical quest for vengeance, she strikes out on her own: to rescue her beloved siblings from a tragic fate and take savage retribution on Leng. But Leng is one step ahead and has a surprise for them all..."-- No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |