Sandstorm by James Rollins

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(Mass Market Paperback - Limited Edition-Lenticular Imagery Cover)

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  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Pub. Date: April 2005
  • ISBN-13: 9780060580674
  • Sales Rank: 3,179
  • 608pp
  • Series: Sigma Force Series, #1
  • Edition Description: Limited Edition-Lenticular Imagery Cover
 
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Synopsis

An inexplicable explosion rocks the antiquities collection of a London museum and the race begins to determine how it happened, why it happened, and what it means.

Lady Kara Kensington's family paid a high price in money and blood to found the gallery that now lies in ruins. Her search for answers leads Kara and her friend Safia al-Maaz, the gallery's curator, into a world they never dreamed existed. Evidence exposed by the tragedy suggests that Ubar, a lost city buried beneath the Arabian desert, is more than mere legend...and that something astonishing is waiting there.

The two extraordinary women and their guide, Omaha Dunn, are not the only ones being drawn to the desert. Former U.S. Navy SEAL Painter Crowe, a covert government operative and head of an elite counter-espionage team, is hunting down a dangerous turncoat and the trail is pointing him toward Ubar.

What is hidden below the sand is more than a valuable relic of ancient history. It is an ageless power that lives and breathes. Many lives have already been destroyed by ruthless agencies dedicated to guarding its mysteries and harnessing its might. The end may be at hand for Kara, Safia, Crowe, and all of the interlopers who wish to expose its mysteries, as it prepares to unleash the most terrible storm of all...

Performed by Dennis Boutsikaris

Publishers Weekly

If he weren't such a good action writer, Rollins might make a dynamite climatologist. Each of his thrillers has featured as a central character an extreme environment, most recently the Arctic ice (Ice Hunt, 2003) and now the hot sands of Saudi Arabia. But while Rollins writes settings and scenes that sizzle, what's caught in the heat are usually familiar characters grappling with far-fetched threats, and so it is here. That one male lead is a danger-courting archeologist named Omaha Dunn seems less parodic than tired, and the novel's premise of a hoard of antimatter hidden in the legendary city of Ubar is almost as ridiculous as the idea that this cache has been guarded for millennia by an order of women who propagate without men, via parthenogenesis. Rollins writes less like Michael Crichton than Stan Lee. Most of his readers won't care, though, because there's just enough scientific gloss on the nonsense to make it palatable, and anyway, what they want, and what he delivers, is action, as Omaha and an American military agent, Painter, join forces with two Mideastern women, one a scientist, the other a billionaire, to locate the steadily destabilizing antimatter before it's snatched by a villainous cabal, or worse, blows up the planet. And that's why they'll buy this book in numbers big enough to have it flirt with national bestseller lists. Agent, Russell Galen. (July) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

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Biography

Spelunker, scuba diver, and all-around adventure junkie James Rollins sold his veterinary practice in Sacramento, California, to concentrate full-time on writing -- his thirst for thrills clearly informing his bestselling novels, including Black Order, Subterranean and The Judas Strain.

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Customer Reviews

Good action, awful science, awful realismby Simnia

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October 17, 2008: With the cool holographic book cover and action plot, this seemed like it would be a good read, but I was disappointed. The main problem is everything was so far-fetched. There were some extraordinary introductory events that were fascinating--a tremendous explosion in a museum resulting from ball lightning drifting over to an ancient statue, and a strange dust devil in the desert--but when the explanations of these phenomena were finally revealed, they were too scientifically implausible. The main premise was that antimatter could exist in a special, naturally encased form found in a meteorite, but I seriously doubt such a form is even slightly plausible. The ancient order of women guardians with metaphysical powers made the plot even more unrealistic, and the ancient underground city at the end was at least as bad in a B-movie-like way. The snake-in-a-tub and the excessive save-the-world scope at the end were too James Bondish for my taste, as well. Other than that, the action was good and the emergence of mysterious parties competing for the antimatter was also good. So if you're looking for an action book about antimatter, meteorites, and deserts, and if you don't mind lapses in realism, you should enjoy this book, otherwise I'd recommend skipping it.

I Also Recommend: Angels and Demons.

Action Adventureby Anonymous

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June 26, 2007: Great Read. Lots of nonstop action. The characters get out of some amazing situations. Really get to know the characters and like most of them.


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