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Nevada Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Nevada
The Trailsman #318: Nevada Nemesis (Trailsman)
Published in Mass Market Paperback by Signet (2008-04-01)
Author: Jon Sharpe
List price: $5.99
New price: $2.58
Used price: $1.92

Average review score:

"You saw men like this coming home from war.Haunted was the only appropriate word."
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-20

I haven't read a Trailsman novel for some time as I have been concentrating on keeping up with the latest Longarm novels as well as earlier episodes.The Trailsman is also one of my favorite characters.While Longarm is a Deputy US Marshal and part of the Federal Justice system;The Trailsman is a man who answers to nobody but himself and roams the Old West and takes on life and confronts injustice whenever and wherever he finds it.
This episode is quite typical of the kind of thing he encounters.It is a good Old West yarn,with lots of fast action and interesting,well developed characters.Some are fine upright people,some have felt the hard knocks of life,some have partaken in lifes pleasures;and some are evil and downright scum who need to be taken to task---and The Trailsman is just the man for the job.
The other reviewer tells enough about the story,so I'll leave the rest to the reader.
One thing about these western series that I like,is the artwork on the covers and trying to connect the images on the covers with people and scenes in the story.
In this case,we get two great scenes.However;you'll be hard come by in finding riders shooting at the burning buildings ;and then the scene of The Trailsman defending the jail on fire behind him,just isn't the way it played out in the story---but a great picture,nonetheless.
Overall,a great read,great artwork;and if you enjoy a good Old West saga---you'll like it.

Rattles along at a fair pace
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-07
Riding through the desert, Skye Fargo rescues a half-dead man on the run from the law. Fargo returns the fugitive to town, only to find that the accused murderer he brought back alive is sure to be lynched - even though he may be innocent. The elderly sheriff can't get the job done, so Fargo pins on a tin star and investigates. But there's more than one killer in this town...and all of them are about to take on the Trailsman.

This book rattles along at a fair pace as Fargo, acting as a temporary lawman, struggles to find proof as to the identity of a killer. The author throws in a few suspects that help keep the reader guessing although he does reveal the who a bit early on for my taste.

The book doesn't have nearly as much action as I've come to expect from a Trailsman novel but the plot was strong enough to hold my interest.

There is something that seemed totally out of character though, and I quote, "Fargo had never given banks much consideration except for the idle thought about robbing one or two of them." I personally don't remember Fargo ever taking to the outlaw trail or considering it before. Particularly when you see the date the book is set, 1867, a few years after the majority in the series.

Still, that aside, the book was entertaining and the cover seems to be showcasing a new artist to the series.

Nevada
Trees Of The California Sierra Nevada (Trees of the Us)
Published in Paperback by Stackpole Books (2005-02)
Author: George A. Petrides
List price: $9.95
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Average review score:

a great small pocket book to identify common trees in northern California.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-21
A great small pocket book to identify common trees in northern California. Plus, shipping was really fast.

Good Laymans Guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-08
Great for the occasional hiker strolling thru the woods and wondering, "i wonder what kind of tree that is"? good illustrations esp. illustrations of bark(which are usually hard to draw). spend a couple of bucks, it will make you hike a whole lot more interesting.....

Nevada
A View from the Witch's Cave: Folktales of the Pyrenees (Basque Series)
Published in Hardcover by University of Nevada Press (1991-09)
Author:
List price: $21.95
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Average review score:

A Basque concept of the world
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-28
This is an important book to understand some of the magical and animist conceptions that appear in the popular lives of the Basques. I would recommend this book to everyone, but specially to those that are interested in the history of European Witchcraft in general and Basque Witchcraft in particular. Barandiaran, the father of Basque anthropology, presents some of the aspects less known about Basque culture and tradition. Basque mythology provides an explanation for the witch-craze of the 16th and 17th centuries in Spain. This book presents the core of Basque culture that is its myths and folktales. It is a magical reading experience.

Great anthology, misleading title
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-06-16
"A View from the Witch's Cave" is a great anthology of sixty-four folktales from the Spanish Basque Country. Collected between 1900 and 1956 by José Miguel de Barandiarán, the Jakob and Wilhelm Grimm of the Basque Country, they were published in Spanish translation in 1988. The stories are arranged into three sections: witty animal fables, tales about humans and witches, and "legends" that explain the origins of Basque folk-beliefs. As Barandiarán points out in his introduction, while these tales only form part of the "peripheral vision" of today's Basques, they encapsulate a lot of the ancient Basque folklife. Elements of the "old wisdom" have co-existed with Christianity for hundreds of years and allow us both to glimpse some of the Basque Country's unrecorded history and "piece together the spiritual physiognomy" of the ancient and early-modern Basques.

The book's English title and the previous customer review, though, are misleading. First, this is not entirely a book about witchcraft. Witches figure prominently in many of the stories, but the original Spanish title -- "Brief Anthology of Fables, Stories, and Legends from the Basque Country" -- was more accurate. Second, the subtitle, "Folktales of the Pyrenees", is also misleading. These tales come only from the Basque Country, not from Catalonia.

Still, it's a great anthology. The English translation by Linda White is expert. If you're interested in finding the tales in Spanish, check out the original version of the book (Editorial Txertoa, San Sebastián, 1988) or the excellent 12-volume series, "Cuentos y leyendas de la Euskal Herria fantástica" edited by José Dueso (ROGER, Donostia, 1998) in which many of the stories are reprinted almost verbatim.

Nevada
Women of the Sierra (Women of the West)
Published in Paperback by Wesanne Publications (1990-07)
Author: Anne Seagraves
List price: $12.95
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Average review score:

History that is easy to read.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-08-01
Loved this book, and all the others written by this author.
Wish there were more.

Great!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-18
I read Soiled Doves: Prostitution in the Early West by this same author and truly enjoyed it. I wanted to read some more books by author Anne Seagraves so I found Women of the Sierra. It was hardly a disappointment. This book tells the stories of many different flavors of women from the west. It was a great way to read about a variety of women and how they came to be in the west. I can't wait to get the rest of her books!!!

Nevada
The Year of the Grizzly (Saga of the Sierras)
Published in Paperback by Bethany House Publishers (1992-08)
Authors: Brock Thoene and Bodie Thoene
List price: $8.99
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Average review score:

Year of the Grizzly
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-11-08
At first I didn't know if I was going to like this book, but all of the sudden I was just sucked into it. This book does not end like a normal book you would read, it isn't one of those books that you know how it is going to end, it kept me sucked in until the very end. And it still seems like it should have another sequel.

"Grizzly" is one of those books-- if it's hot you sweat, and if it is cold you need a blanket. It makes you feel like you are there. The only thing I didn't like about this book was the way the characters talked. The thing that made it difficult to read was the slang.

Will Reed was the reason this book was so good. Will fought for what he believed in. Sometimes he fought the Americans and sometimes he fought the Mexicans, but no matter what side he was fighting for, Will fought for the rights of everyone's freedom.

One of the best of our times
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2002-01-30
When I read this book I just couldn't put it down! I don't like frontier books but this one was just amazing. It teaches you a very valuable lesson and will have you hanging on every last page. The ending is to die for! Everyone should read this book!

Nevada
Desperation
Published in Hardcover by Viking Adult (1996-10-01)
Author: Stephen King
List price: $27.95
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Average review score:

A bit of a dud...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-24
I won't tear it apart...BUT...it just didn't seem like Mr. King was at the top of his game with this one. Let's just leave it at that.

It takes long thoughts to see this novel as a strong work
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-24
Luis Mejia - Desperation is a deep and certainly scary work of fiction which gives way to a general sense of message through it's thoughtful scenaries. Among the King universe Desperation is unconventional, although it gets quite refreshing for it's style. It captures the crudeness and strambotic sense of the desert, the mystic power always present in his paranormal fiction, the storyline is easy-going and lineal (which gives the plot a witty sense), and the reader can be excited by the All-American characters King writes with such a dark sense of anti-humor. Apart from this factors usually present on Stephen King's work, it's impossible not to think that, even for King, the work shoud've been better crafted; while the storyline is understandable, it hits into common and even incredilby predictable boundaries; clutches of plot pieces are wrolngly scattered on through (Eg: the survivor lady which gets to the cinema and the impossible to connect section's of David Carver's past) and specially the quick and running ending, which is worst portrayed than the length of the whole novel. By all means, at the end of the novel, take a great time to think about the deepness of the messages so wonderfully expressed on the novel; the merciless aspect of God (the "hole" Desperation represents, the destiny God carries out on David and even the rest of the connecting survivors), the crude appeareances of stereotypes, and how evil and goodness are balanced. Be prepared to read an unconvential King novel, all gotten into the bloody side of the desert and the terrible perspectives of loneliness in towns and it's only connections.

First King Experience
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
This was the first Stephen King book that I ever read. I saw it at a 2nd hand store and figured for $5 I couldn't go wrong. Well I have to say when I opened it that night after work I could not put it down! This book was amazing! The intese details paint a perfect picture. Definately a good read.

Flawed, but still good
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
Once again a novel about the classic battle of good vs. evil, but King (as usual) does a good job of coming up with original material. This keeps the reader involved, as the suspense comes from trying to figure out just what/what the bad guy is and what he wants.

That said, even when writing a horror book about the unreal, it is not justifiable to throw all logic out the window, and sadly King forgets logic in both the details and the overall plot.

For instance, in one scene a main character is looking at a WALLET-sized photograph and is able to clearly identify not only three men, and the baseball cap that one of them is wearing, but also the name of the club on a sign behind them. If this isn't bad enough, it should be mentioned that the photograph is 30 years old. (I guess they don't make photos like they used to.)

Flaws in the plot are also clumsy: in another scene hero David makes another one of the main characters empty his pockets to make sure that the guy isn't carrying any "evil rocks". But when does he do this? Not after another lady is found with evil rocks, when it would be logical. Instead, the pockets are emptied in fact much later: RIGHT AFTER David declares that this guy has had a "change of heart" and is now certainly on the good side.

Most embarrassing is the overall theme. All through the book, the main characters all determine that "God must be cruel" to let so many people die in the town. But on the last page of the book, it is once and for all decided that "God is love". What happened during this time for the main characters to change their minds? The evil guy decides to let the main characters escape, but God commands them to destroy the evil guy, which leads to the death of 2 of the main characters in the process.

Flaws aside, overall the book is entertaining. However, in between the action, King for some reason has some of the narrative recounted by hero David (who tells the background story after seeing it in a vision) rather than just having flashbacks in the story. This leads to a book that would be equivalent to a fast-paced action movie that is inexplicably interupted up by 10-minute sequences of dialogue.

Pretty Good Read
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-05
This book concerns a number of travellers trapped by what appears to be a maniac cop, in a mining town called Desperation, and their attempts to escape.

As Stephen King books go, I did not think this was one of his better ones, but was a pretty good read, nonetheless. I felt the characters in the story were reasonably good, and kept you interested in them, for most of the time, anyway, as it should be pointed out, that this book is slow moving in parts, by this author's standards.

The main drawback, I felt was that the whole 'Tak' thing was weak, and got slightly boring at times. It also could have been explained a bit better.

Nevada
21: Bringing Down the House - Movie Tie-In: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions
Published in Paperback by Free Press (2008-01-29)
Author: Ben Mezrich
List price: $15.00
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Average review score:

Great book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-22
Pros: Great book about MIT students who use their brains for more than science, but to take advantage of inefficient markets. Well written, fast paced and exciting.

Cons: None

Summary: Fast read about a real story that's exciting and fun.

Overall: 9/10

Interesting and Amazing
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-12
In Bringing Down The House, Ben Mezrich tells the true story of a group of MIT students who count cards in blackjack. The story focuses on Kevin Lewis, and how he came to be an expert card counter. At no time is this story dull or boring. It will keep you into it until the very end. The story itself is unbelievable, which makes the book even more amazing. Mezrich does a great job of describing the thoughts and actions that each student took during the book. He also does a good job on showing each character's growth and development during the book. Kevin starts off the story as a shy Asian kid who is not happy with his job at the lab. Once his friends Martinez and Fisher show him the amazing world of counting cards, Kevins life turns completely different. The Las Vegas highlife and huge amounts of money turn Kevin into a completely different person. His change during the book is smooth and very believable. This is the kind of book that you will pick up and wont be able to put down. It's an easy and a very fun read. It will show you a different side of Vegas and a different side of Blackjack. Mezrich shows how difficult card counting really is and how much hard work it is to master it. Kevin and his team went out nearly every weekend to Vegas to count cards. Their lives in Las Vegas completely overshadowed their lives at home. Not only did the team spend almost every weekend in Las Vegas, but they had to keep their double lives secret from all their family and close friends. The team counted for over a year. Spending that much time together, there must be some problems they encounter. If you read this book I can guarantee you that you will not be disappointed.

Tired of being lied to
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-11
Looks like Ben Mezrich can join the ranks of James Frey, Dave Pelzer and Kathy O'Beirne, who write fiction but call it non-fiction. After reading this book I decided to do some online research. Didn't take long to find this comment in Wikipedia "In 2008, Boston magazine and The Boston Globe investigated the accuracy of Mezrich's non-fiction, identifying occasions in his blackjack books where scenes were invented out of whole cloth." Very disappointing to discover another best seller that is so fabricated yet purports to be telling the truth.

I enjoyed reading it until I did some background research
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-09
Not sure what to say. There might be a kernel of truth to what happened, but it certainly didn't happen as described in this tripe. Anyone who falls for this sure is naive.

Liked the book, but not the crude language.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-31
I didn't understand why the book said the F word so many times. I know that it is based in Vegas, but I just don't think that it was necessary and got very annoying towards the end. It also makes me hesitate to recommend this book because I don't want to offend anyone and them thinking that I didn't mind the crude language.

After I read the book I looked up the story on the Internet about what happened with these MIT guys and I was annoyed to find that most of the stuff that was in the novel was untrue or exageratted. I just wish he wouldn't of made up some of the stuff in the book. I am sure it would of still been interesting if he told the truth of what the students did.

Nevada
Void Moon
Published in Hardcover by Little, Brown and Company (1999-12-07)
Author: Michael Connelly
List price: $32.00
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Collectible price: $21.50

Average review score:

Even the Good Guys are Bad
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-16
This is another fast paced, well written crime novel from Michael Connelly. In this story about a Las Vegas casino scam gone bad, Connelly tells the main story while he gradually fills the reader in on "the rest of the story" (to quote Paul Harvey). This technique really adds to the effect.

One of the most interesting aspects of this crime drama is that virtually everyone is "bad." Only one law enforcement officer appears in the entire book, and that is almost a cameo. It is literally bad guy v bad guy all the way with lots of bloodshed and plot twists throughout. Of course, some of the bad folks (Cassie and Leo) are actually quite likeable, and the reader tends to pull for them and forget that they too are criminals. But then again, when a thief robs a thief, is it really a crime?

Anyway, I thought this was an excellent story masterfully told. "Lincoln Lawyer" is still my favorite Connelly novel, but this is right up there.

A-Void
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-11

Unless you feel like you have to read every novel by Michael Connelly, this one you can skip.

Void Moon is a crime story that will teach you more than ever wanted to know about how to do a hot prowl (steal from someone who is sleeping in the room). Detailed sections explain how to take a lock apart so that it doesn't lock (but seems to be locked), crawl through the HVAC conduits, and install remote cameras to steal the combination to a safe. I know you've always wanted to know those things. As a bonus, you'll also learn how to do some simple sleight-of-hand magic tricks. Just to be sure you don't get bored, Mr. Connelly also teaches you about astrology (the "void moon" reference). Have you got all that?

All those details aside, Void Moon is a story about parolee Cassie Black who sells expensive sports cars for a living by playing up to "overnight geniuses" who have just signed with the studios for big bucks. She used to do hot prowls and misses the excitement. Suddenly, something shifts in her life, and she decides it's time to make a big score. The rest of the book describes her pursuit of that score and what results. Along the way, the plot deals heavily in synchronicity to reinforce the theme of "fate" in our lives.

Cassie Black is an appealing character is a story that has more unpleasant parts than pleasant ones. This story is perfect for those who like to be pessimistic by expecting bad things to happen. Her nemesis turns out to be an unusually unappealing psychopath. Here's where the story becomes drenched in unnecessary evil and gore. Yuck!

Void Missed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
Although somewhat entertaining to read, this story by highly recommended Michael Connelly just misses success. A narrative slow in progression with a weak background story. Nice to see a female lead in a caper. Interesting note- one of the characters in Void Moon is mentioned in Michael Connelly's excellent book "City of Bones".

Connelly Never Fails ...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
to please. Everyone LOVES Harry Bosch and we can NEVER get enough of him and his adventures. This takes us away from Harry and the result is just as pleasing. Cassie Black is an ex-con trying to go straight. She is lured back into a final caper and things go very bad. Character development is good and the plot gets your blood pumping. We will all have more Harry soon enough. Great Summer Read!!

Cassie Black takes on the Cuban mafia!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2008-11-07
Cassie Black is a thief and an ex-con, currently on parole, working at a car dealership selling Porsches to the heavy wallet brigade in Los Angeles. To say more about Cassie is to chance spoiling the novel because Cassie's history and the background story is the driving force behind what she has become. Michael Connelly is stingy with the details as he masterfully holds the suspense at unbearably high levels and feeds the reader only enough bits and pieces of Cassie's background for her current behaviour to make sense. Suffice it to say, that she can't handle the straight life and needs one more score -a monster payday that will allow her to retire and disappear to parts unknown.

Her target is a high roller at The Cleopatra, a Las Vegas casino that has seen better days. The ninja style high-tech caper is wildly successful but Black is aghast when she realizes that her haul is easily ten times what she was expecting. "It is possible to steal too much!" Clearly she has stepped into the middle of a mob transaction and she knows that the Cuban mafia will pursue her to the very ends of the earth to recover their money and to kill her as an example to all who might presume to get in their way.

"Void Moon" is a fabulous diversion from Connelly's wildly successful Harry Bosch series and works magnificently as a stand-alone novel. Connelly's description of Black's outrageous theft right under the noses of the casino and hotel security safeguards is positively breathtaking. You'll never sleep well at night in a hotel again! Her characters are thrilling - Thelma Kibble, the corpulent, black parole officer with a heart made of a wonderful combination of soft, warm putty and ice, cold steel; Jack Karch, the ruthless, psychopathic investigator who's on the casino's payroll but will do anything to take the money for himself; Vincent Grimaldi, the self-centered casino director whose neck is in a very tight noose unless he recovers the stolen money; and, of course, Jodie Shaw, the beautiful little girl around whom Cassie's life and the entire plot ultimately revolves.

As usual, Connelly's dialogue positively sings with hi-fi clarity and realism! His characters leap off the page with depth and believability! And the plot sizzles from one page to the next through the entire length of the novel. I was grateful to reach the end of the novel so that I could actually take a breath. I think I was turning purple! Highly recommended.

Paul Weiss

Nevada
The Innocent
Published in Audio CD by Penguin Audio (2005-04-21)
Author: Harlan Coben
List price: $39.95
New price: $11.00
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Average review score:

Book review of The innocentby Harlan Coban
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-21
This was my first contact with the writing of Mr. Coban, and I started reading the prologue while walking from my mailbox, into the kitchen and on to my favorite chair without lifting my eyes from the pages. The book was fast paced, interesting and had a thousand quirks and turns. I felt sorry for the protaganist, wished him luck and was happy with the final outcome. It was a book I could not put down until I turned the final page.

GOOD TILL THE END
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-07
I was really into this book until the end. I get very annoyed when a book is exciting and suspenseful and then in the end beyond belief. My big question at the end was how did Sister Mary Rose know where the daughter was to contact her in the first place. (I had guessed who she was early on.) Maybe I missed something along the way - I did go back to see if I had, but could find nothing.

I definitely enjoy Coben's style and wit. However, this is the second book I have read of his where the ending just didn't stack up to the overall book. However, I might try one more, as he is an entertaining writer.

A serious page turner
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-02
A thriller that grabs you from the beginning and doesn't disappoint. Characters and situations that are gripping and engaging. Not a classic by any means, but a good fun read if you are into thrillers.

Simple Plot with Complex Twists
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-19
Harlan Coben has yet to disappoint me. The Innocent is really not an overly complex plot, yet at the same time it offered depth that really kept me interested. The characters have complex personalities and the plot twists, as with all of Coben's books that I've read, continue to surprise the reader.

The last 100 pages made it worth the read.
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-02
I had heard Harlan Coben's name for years in book chats, but had never read him until this book. Since the voracious readers that I chatted with in years past had spoken of Mr. Coben reverently, I must admit that I was disappointed in the first half of this book--this was just not the caliber of writing that I had been expecting.

While the writing may not have been as strong as I expected, Coben's storytelling was good. "The Innocent" is a dense, multi-layered mystery involving a large cast of generally-well-drawn characters. I really liked the main character, Matt Hunter--a good guy who was at the wrong place at the wrong time when he was young and ended up in prison. Coben uses this good-guy-with-a-bad-rap theme as a major thread in the story, especially when Matt and his wife Olivia try to move back to Matt's old neighborhood and are met with prejudice due to his past.

Like most stories of its ilk, "The Innocent" requires quite a suspension of disbelief--there is some really wacky stuff going on that I sometimes found difficult to take seriously--but, all in all, it is a satisfying story. The last 100 pages, in fact, were outstanding and I was able to end the book on a MUCH higher note than I started it. Given that the book was 500 pages long and I thought only the last 100 pages were great, I wished that the book had been edited down to a tighter 350 or so and maybe it would have been an overall more enjoyable experience.

Nevada
Utopia
Published in Paperback by Arrow Books Ltd (2003-10-02)
Author: Lincoln Child
List price: $14.45
New price: $10.89
Used price: $1.15

Average review score:

Good thriller
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-04
Being a Preston and Child fan, I picked up this book wondering what Child's solo effort would be like. I wasn't disappointed. This was a very good book with it's share of horror, suspense, intrigue and gave the readers lots to puzzle over. It was nice to have a break from the P&C Pendergast series of books and Child delivered.

Produce Man
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-15
Hard to stay with this book. I have read all of the other books and this one seemed to drift.
Really liked the idea of the theme park and all of the detail. Someone should build a theme park like Utopia.
The ending was very predictable but fun in a way.

Somewhat disappointing
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-08
What can I say? I was somewhat disappointed by this book; it is not up to the usual standards of the author [but it IS an earlier volume in his output, etc/].

Utopia by Lincoln Child
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-09
Lincoln Child is one of my very favorite authors ever and this book was superbly written with action continuously all the way through. I strongly suggest all books he co-wrote with Douglas Preston and his other two solo books, Death Match and Deep Storm. This man is one of the most super-talented and gifted authors today. This book takes place in an amusement park which is a little different than his other books but with his wit its probably more fun than actually going to an amusement park.

Solid techno-thriller
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-04-08
Amusement parks, explosions, and carnage, what more can you ask for? Sure, I wasn't enamored with any of the main characters - I thought some of the back story on the main characters was superfluous and a bit trite, but I admit I really liked a lot of the side characters. They were written perfectly, with just enough background and personality to make them interesting (yes, even the robots!), but not so much you felt info-dumped on. And while I do like romance, I thought it was out of place in this book. I felt a little forced and stiff, and I don't think the storyline would have suffered without it.

Still, I have to admit that with all its flaws, I still very much enjoyed reading it. As action novels go it has the perfect blend of bad guys, mystery, and outright carnage. And despite all that goes horribly wrong for so many of the guests, it made me want to visit that theme park! The descriptions of the rides were incredible; I just wish we'd been told more about some of the other rides shown on the map at the front of the book.

Unlike some of the other Preston/Child books, there was no element of the supernatural - this is more of a straight techno-thriller. I'd recommend it to anyone who enjoys a good action-packed story, and to all fans of amusement parks.


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