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Ice Limit/Abridged

Ice Limit/Abridged

List Price: $24.98
Your Price: $15.74
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 0 stars
Summary: A thanks to our READERS!
Review: We (Doug and Linc) would just like to thank our AWESOME READERSfor their loyalty and support (and good taste)! We enjoy hearing fromyou. Email us at prestonchild@prestonchild.com. Check out our website, www.prestonchild.com

Rating: 0 stars
Summary: A thanks to our READERS!
Review: We (Doug and Linc) would just like to thank our AWESOME READERSfor their loyalty and support (and good taste)! We enjoy hearing from you...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The duo's best
Review: Preston and Child are very interesting writers, but typically they dwell more towards the supernatural side. Not ghosts exactly, but stories that need scientific disbelief greatly suspended.

That isn't nearly as true with this book. It's more primal. Rather than man vs some form of strange beast, it's simply man vs the elements (and, of course, man vs man).

It makes for a more exciting read. Nothing feels terribly contrived (though, of course, some twists are), and there's an interest in the process througout.

It's a story about greed and engineering, and that melds together quite well. Highly recommended for someone interested in a whimsical novel of this kind.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This icy novel takes you to the limit of adventure...
Review: I have been a longtime fan of Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child ever since I read their incredibly fun 'Relic' (which still ranks for me as their best release-to-date) I am always excited when I see their next book on the shelf...and after finishing up 'Thunderhead' I just couldn't WAIT to read 'The Ice Limit' although I had my doubts that they could exceed the fantastic adventure I had just finished. Well not only is 'The Ice Limit' better (in MY opinion), they have come up with probably the most surprising ending since the 'The Sixth Sense'.

Preston & Child have come up with another winner of a plot, this time we're at the very bottom of the world trying to recover the largest meteorite ever discovered. In fact, it turns out to be MUCH bigger than anyone predicted, making it by far the most valuable item of its kind in history. The problem now is finding a way to transport something so large from the Southern Hemisphere to the East coast of America...Enter Effective Engineering Solutions (EES) a company so certain of their success they actually GUARANTEE they will be able to pull off this amazing stunt. Herein lies the seeds of an incredible adventure which captured me literally from page ONE. I like a book that can seize my interest this way, and Preston & Child seem to have a knack for being able to do it in each of their books. From the eccentric Billionaire who wants the meteorite (Palmer Lloyd) to the mastermind behind moving it (Eli Glinn) and

then we have the mysterious Sam McFarlane, who is tapped to help find this massive rock and assist Eli in figuring out all the details of how to move the largest item in history so far. Now if this wasn't action enough (trust me, it is) factor into the situation the Argentinian Navy which has a ship with a renegade captain who is determined--at ANY cost--to see to it that the arrogant Americans NEVER retrieve whatever it is they are looking for (because he doesn't know for sure himself).

Preston & Child have once again served up an incredible action/adventure/thriller that keeps the pages turning as well as gives you an amazing surprise at the end--but PLEASE do NOT read ahead and spoil the surprise, trust me, it'll ruin the end if you do, but WOW!! What a GREAT ending! If you are a fan of these two fantastic and creative authors, do NOT hesitate, run out and grab this book and FORGET waiting until it comes out in paperback--this is worth EVERY PENNY in hardback (for the ending alone). Highly recommended.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Couldn't Put It Down
Review: The Ice Limit is on my ten best list. I was reading this book late into the night knowing I'd struggle to get up the next morning. I would say, "Okay, one more chapter." But, before I knew it, it was three more.

I've read a handful of books by Preston and Child. Although I like them all, The Ice Limit is my favorite. It's packed with adventure, and I mean packed. The characters are great. The authors' description of the characters made me grow attached to them. And for as many characters as were in the book, this was quite a feat.

The premise itself was fascinating. I'm a sucker for plots dealing with the unknown. In this case, the unknown is a meteor. The bulk of the book involves the efforts to extract the meteor from the ice and return it to Palmer Lloyd's museum. Needless to say, this is not a simple process. Beyond the environmental issues, the characters had to deal with sabotage, a mad Chilean (?) navy captain, and the meteor's strange properties.

The climax of the novel left me breathless, and the ending left me wanting more. The last final twist got me; I did not foresee it.

If you're looking for a fast read with lots of adventure and an intelligent plot, pick up The Ice Limit and settle in for a wild ride.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: EXCELLENT!!
Review: Wow! Brilliantly written! Most novels with this level of suspense are as realistic as a James Bond movie. The Ice Limit will keep you on the edge of your seat without insulting your intelligence. I couldn't put it down!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of my all-time favorites
Review: This is, in my humble opinion, a far superior book to "The Relic," "The Reliquary," "Thunderhead," etc. While I adore all of these books, "The Ice Limit" is without any doubt the gold standard of techno-thrillers. I recommended this book to everyone I met out in Iraq, and continue to view it as a terrific, albeit understated, adventure book.

Unlike other books of the Preston/Child vintage, this was not necessarily destined to be a great adventure movie. This is not in any way a criticism of either this book or their other books, it is simply a fact. However, "The Ice Limit" provides some of the greatest suspense and adventure scenes of recent literature. Who can deny the appeal of a "race to the finish" of an American retro-fitted oil tanker vs. a South American warship?

Despite all the flag-waving, the real question is: How we will we (civilized nations) respond to the threat against humanity posed by this "meteorite?" For this is the central question that sets this novel apart from inherently localized threats such as "The Relic," "The Cabinet of Curiosities," "Stil Life with Crows" and "Thunderhead." All of these novels refer to a presence that could threaten humanity eventually;however, "Ice Limit" reflects the here and now...

To me, "The Ice Limit" embodies the best of the Preston/Child writings: personal conflict vs. personal preference; man vs. nature; science vs. religion; etc. This is the penultimate Lincoln/Child novel, and I heartily recommend it to anyone who will stand still long enough to listen :-)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Rip-snorting technothriller - but it's *good*
Review: I described this book to a friend as
"This is what Clive Cussler would write
if he could write."

That is, the characters are two-dimensional (instead
of one), and plot twists sometimes arrive ahead
of the telegraph signal announcing them.

Palmer Lloyd is also one of the very few remote
believable billionaire industrialist tycoon
characters I've encountered in a novel. He's not
a cartoon plutocrat or a mustache-twirling villain.
The Indiana Jones meteorite hunter is a great
protagonist. Eli Glinn - I'd give a great deal
to have come up with _that_ character.

And so on, and so on. I was delighted to see a
Filipino supporting character - even a paragraph
of Tagalog! All in all, very enjoyable, and gave
me something to do while waiting for the next
Special Agent Pendergast adventure.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Don't read before bed!! You will not sleep!!!
Review: That scary? Not really. But this novel is so very gripping that you will be completely unable to put it down. I was captivated by the thorough scientific journey Preston-Child takes you on. These are two excellent writers. There are plots in those minds that could never be imagined anywhere else. I would recommend Cabinets of Curiosities as well.

If you dislike binding scientific thrillers, by all means avoid these two. But for the sane world, read on! You won't be disappointed by the end. Not many can keep my attention these days, but these two are worth it. Add them to your library. I'm planning which ones to buy next already.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The duo's best
Review: Preston and Child are very interesting writers, but typically they dwell more towards the supernatural side. Not ghosts exactly, but stories that need scientific disbelief greatly suspended.

That isn't nearly as true with this book. It's more primal. Rather than man vs some form of strange beast, it's simply man vs the elements (and, of course, man vs man).

It makes for a more exciting read. Nothing feels terribly contrived (though, of course, some twists are), and there's an interest in the process througout.

It's a story about greed and engineering, and that melds together quite well. Highly recommended for someone interested in a whimsical novel of this kind.


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