The Striker
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
Turn-of-the-century detective Isaac Bell goes undercover as a coal miner for his first solo mission in this novel in Clive Cussler's #1 New York Times bestselling series.
It is 1902, and a bright, inexperienced young man named Isaac Bell, only two years out of his apprenticeship at the Van Dorn Detective Agency, has an urgent message for his boss. Hired to hunt for radical unionist saboteurs in the coal mines, he is witness to a terrible accident that makes him think something else is going on…that provocateurs are at work and bigger stakes are in play.
Little does he know just how big they are.
Given exactly one week to prove his case, Bell quickly finds himself pitted against two of the most ruthless opponents he has ever known—men of staggering ambition and cold-bloodedness who are not about to let some wet-behind-the-ears detective stand in their way.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bestseller Cussler and Scott explore the origins of their series hero in the exciting sixth Isaac Bell adventure (after 2012's The Thief). In 1902, Bell's employer, the Van Dorn Agency, dispatches the private detective to West Virginia, where he's to go undercover as a coal miner and ferret out the identities of saboteurs looking to do damage to the Gleason Consolidated Coal & Coke Company on behalf of a union outraged by the ultrahazardous working conditions. When a train accident leads to fatalities, the Pinkertons finger union organizer Jim Higgins as the person responsible. Bell is baffled as to how the chain that connected the lead coal car to the engine could have been fractured in plain view of hundreds of workers without anyone, including himself, seeing anything. The action flows swiftly, and the authors do a good job depicting the work conditions and the class warfare of the time.
Customer Reviews
Liked the Bell Character
Always love Cussler, and enjoy the Dirk Pitt, Kurt Austin & Juan Cabrillo books. Now I can add Isaac Bell tommy list!
Disappointed
I've been a Cussler fan for years but was very disappointed by Striker. I found it hard to follow. Characters had multiple names. He suspended time reality by having characters move about the county much quicker than would have been possible in that time period. I understand this was fiction but as I was reading it I kept thinking "how did he get there?" I hated the ending,both the content and writing. He seemed in a rush and didn't put enough into his last few pages. I'm not in a hurry to read another.
Interesting but toooo long
I love the Issac Bell books but this book was way too long. It was similar to a poorly edited movie that could be 1/2 hour shorter..and maybe better if it were shorter. This book was the same. About 100-150 pages too long.