Friday, October 5, 2012

Spartan Gold, Clive Cussler

Spartan Gold, by Clive Cussler

This book was a happy find when my manager at work loaned it to me. I've said it once, I'll say it again, recommend, lend, or mention a book, I will read it!!!!! I love getting new reads from people. Anything and everything, people! I read it all!!! Anyways, I digress...

This was an awesome, amazing, couldn't put it down, action/adventure book. It follows married couple Sam and Remi Fargo, treasure hunters, on a whirl wind adventure. This is also a historical fiction book, so there are lots of little historical nuggets about Napoleon's lost treasure, Greek history (Delphi and lost Greek statues made of pure gold...), Persian history (focused on Xerxes the Great, a very kick ass dude, until he died, at least) and all that is brought together by the power hungry Persian Bondaruk who is OBSESSED with all this stuff because he thinks he is a direct descendant of Xerxes himself.

Sam And Remi are vacationing and happen to find a shard of a wine bottle that kick starts their journey of finding Napoleon's lost treasure, a convoluted treasure hunt with secret codes that the Fargo's research team flawlessly decode. Bondaruk catches wind of these finds and tries to threaten the Fargo's to give up the search. When that doesn't work, he just uses them to continue his search. What really cracks me up about these two, the Fargo's, is that they will literally have just gotten gunned down, and then in the next scene they are getting deep tissue massages at the Four Seasons! Like nothing happened! Just another day, I guess!! But anyways, the Fargo's follow the trail of the wine bottles, and into Bondaruk's mansion to get the other bottle, and discover the bad guy's obsession with Persian history and weapons. They put the pieces together and figure out the whole Persian side to it, are lead to a cave, and BOOM, they find missing Greek statues made of pure gold (Napoleon's lost treasure). Just like that...

Well obviously not, there are of course huge cat and mouse chase scenes, car crashes, war wounds, etc.  Like is said, it was a pretty great action/adventure story, so getting to the treasure was just a fraction of the good stuff...

My only real complaint of this book was the ending. It was like Cussler was only given so many pages to write this story in, and such a fantastic story going, that he got to the last 10 pages and was like, Oh yea, this has to end like now. And that is pretty much how it did end. They got to the cave, had a shoot out with the bad guys, and then called in a chopper to pick em up, and they decided what their next adventure would be. It was just...to quick. I wish that there was just a little more closure, like what happened with the statues, the repercussions of Bondaruk and his men and his obsessive collection. It was all wrapped up very quickly in a neat and pretty bow, and I don't know, just wasn't the ideal way for it to end for me.

With that said, the next adventure, The Lost Empire, looks promising and I can't wait to start reading it!!!!!

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Moon Dance, J.R. Rain

Moon Dance, by J.R. Rain

This was a quick, fun vampire book. The first of a series, we meet Samantha Moon, who apparently is a vampire. Refreshingly, this was not your typical vampire novel. She is a private detective, working mostly at night, but unlike most vamp books, she has a family, and because of that, she is trying to maintain some sort of normalcy in her new life.

Let's backtrack...the book begins with meeting Sam in her house. Her vampire status is never really declared, instead, she has a "condition". She slathers on sunscreen, wears long sleeved shirts and big brimmed sun hats to pick her kids up from school. She seems real lethargic during all this, but once the sun goes down she seems to perk up. We learn that her marriage seems to be on the rocks as well.

She takes a case and meets with her new client. This is where the supernatural really comes out. Her new client, Kingsley Fulcrum (I think some of the names in this book is are kind of silly...like Kingsely Fulcrum...). Turns out Fulcrum is a werewolf. And makes her admit that she is a vampire. The story continues with her working for Fulcrum, trying to figure out who tried to kill him, figure out what to do with her marriage (which doesn't end well) and embrace what she really is without losing everything important, and figuring out what to do when and if she does.

Overall, though it was a new look at a vampire book, not stereotypical at all, it was not exactly a home run. I felt like maybe this book was a good start to something better, and I am looking forward to reading more of the series. I just hope that the character development grows and the stories get a little deeper, as this story just kind of skimmed the surface of anything real deep. Not that every book needs to be deep and telling, but it felt like everything was just on the surface. This could be because Samantha herself has not delved into herself and the vampire within, holding on to a life that she can no longer functionally be a part of. The end of the book gave the impression that book 2, Vampire Moon, might open up to that.