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Crush Depth

Crush Depth

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Out Clancy's Clancy!
Review: Tom Clancy has always been my favorite author on the subject of submarine warfare. His portrayal of modern submarine warfare was the best. That was until I read author Joe Buff's Deep Sound Channel. It had me so absorbed that I read it in a single sitting. Now with this release of Crush Depth, once again I found myself staying up way past my bedtime to finish this exciting novel. Having always had a soft spot for "the Boats", I found this one every bit as exciting as his first. The depiction of tactical nuclear war at sea kept me on the edge of my seat the entire lenght of the book. Kudos for Mr. Buff and I can't wait for his upcoming "Tidal Rip"!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Crush Depth a Winner
Review: When I read Joe Buff's "Deep Sound Channel," his debut as writer, I was so impressed by the performance, that I became an instant fan. His reasearch is awsome--where does he find time to write the books?--and his renderings of the complex technology, strategy, and the geopolitcal engine that runs it all, are clear and accessible. In "Crush Depth," the most recent adventure in the series, Buff has found the proper balance of story vs. technological jargon, not a mean feat. The characters, while each real is his/her own right (even the boats Challenger and Voortrekker have their own personalities, as ships do in real life), continue to develop, as do many of the relationships, most notably those between Jeffrey Fuller and Ilse Reebeck, and between Jeffrey and his parents, while his relationship with his former captain, Commodore Wilson, becomes an example against which Jeffrey can hone his own command style. The action scenes are exciting and keep you guessing as to their outcome, and the cat-and-mouse hunt scenes, where one submarine stalks the other consistly raise the question of which is really stalking which. The tension mounts as the book progresses, and although I rooted for the destruction of the enemy submarine, I found myself a reluctant admirer of ter Horst and especially Van Gelder, and hoping they would survive to challenge Fuller in future books--who else does the "evil axis" have to fill this role? The ending will grip and astound you. The books just keep getting better as they come along. Buff has created a real world populated by real people about whom we care and scenarios that seems to have evolved from where we are in the world today. I look forward to seeing what happens with Jeffrey and Challenger, Jeffrey and his parents, and most of all, Jeffrey and Ilse in the next installment. Keep 'em coming, Joe!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Crush Depth a Winner
Review: When I read Joe Buff's "Deep Sound Channel," his debut as writer, I was so impressed by the performance, that I became an instant fan. His reasearch is awsome--where does he find time to write the books?--and his renderings of the complex technology, strategy, and the geopolitcal engine that runs it all, are clear and accessible. In "Crush Depth," the most recent adventure in the series, Buff has found the proper balance of story vs. technological jargon, not a mean feat. The characters, while each real is his/her own right (even the boats Challenger and Voortrekker have their own personalities, as ships do in real life), continue to develop, as do many of the relationships, most notably those between Jeffrey Fuller and Ilse Reebeck, and between Jeffrey and his parents, while his relationship with his former captain, Commodore Wilson, becomes an example against which Jeffrey can hone his own command style. The action scenes are exciting and keep you guessing as to their outcome, and the cat-and-mouse hunt scenes, where one submarine stalks the other consistly raise the question of which is really stalking which. The tension mounts as the book progresses, and although I rooted for the destruction of the enemy submarine, I found myself a reluctant admirer of ter Horst and especially Van Gelder, and hoping they would survive to challenge Fuller in future books--who else does the "evil axis" have to fill this role? The ending will grip and astound you. The books just keep getting better as they come along. Buff has created a real world populated by real people about whom we care and scenarios that seems to have evolved from where we are in the world today. I look forward to seeing what happens with Jeffrey and Challenger, Jeffrey and his parents, and most of all, Jeffrey and Ilse in the next installment. Keep 'em coming, Joe!


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