Catalogue

Record Details

Catalogue Search


Back To Results
Showing Item 5 of 173

Spartan gold Cover Image E-audiobook E-audiobook

Spartan gold

Cussler, Clive. (Author). Blackwood, Grant. (Added Author). Brick, Scott. (Added Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780307577740 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)
  • ISBN: 0307577740 (sound recording : OverDrive Audio Book)
  • Physical Description: electronic
    electronic resource
    remote
  • Publisher: [New York] : Books on Tape, 2009.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Downloadable audio file.
Title from: Title details screen.
Unabridged.
Duration: 12:22:53.
Participant or Performer Note: Read by Scott Brick.
System Details Note:
Requires OverDrive Media Console
Requires OverDrive Media Console (WMA file size: 177940 KB; MP3 file size: 348960 KB).
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Subject: Treasure troves -- Fiction
Genre: DOWNLOADABLE AUDIOBOOK.
Adventure fiction.
Audiobooks.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2009 September #1
    If you're reading a novel, and you meet a fella called Hadeon Bondaruk, you just know it: this guy's a villain. Villains get the really cool names. Our heroes, on the other hand, a husband-and-wife team of professional treasure hunters, are Sam and Remi Fargo, OK names but not as memorable—which kind of describes the novel, too: OK but not memorable. While exploring the Great Pocomoke Swamp in Delaware, Sam and Remi find, hidden away at the edge of a river, a World War II–era German mini-submarine. But how did it get there? And could the bottle of wine they find inside the sub really be part of a set of bottles on which the emperor Napoleon fashioned a map showing the hidden location of a pair of solid gold pillars, originally hidden in the Pennine Alps 2,500 years ago? Well, of course it could, and soon the Fargos are fighting for their very lives against the enormously powerful Bondaruk, who has a real taste for some old wine. The story moves at a brisk clip, and Hadeon is a scenery-chewing villain, but, finally, the book feels flat. If you read thrillers, you've seen most of this before, and done better, too (imagine, say, what James Rollins might do with this story). For Cussler devotees. Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
Back To Results
Showing Item 5 of 173

Additional Resources