However, the 16 year wait between THE ICE LIMIT (referring to extremely perilous lattitudes south of 60 degrees S) and BEYOND THE ICE LIMIT promises to be another great novel combining PC's trademark well-researched sci-fi adventure with chills and spills. I /5(K). www.doorway.ru: The Ice Limit (): Preston, Douglas, Child, Lincoln, Brick, Scott: Books. Like Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child's earlier collaborations (Relic, Thunderhead, and others), The Ice Limit tools along swiftly, blending nicely drawn characters (excepting, regrettably, the book's true protagonist, the meteorite), a reasonably exciting narrative, and enough graspable science and plausible-seeming theories to bring readers happily up to speed and keep them climax-bound. Not the /5(K).
I've read quite a few Preston / Child Books. Most are diabolical and horrible things happen to people. I reached a point where I was saturated with that kind of book. However, The Ice Limit is a different kind of book altogether. It involves a scientific expedition to recover a meteorite from the Cape Horn Islands. The Lost Island (Gideon Crew) by Douglas Preston Mass Market Paperback. $ Only 19 left in stock - order soon. Ships from and sold by www.doorway.ru FREE Shipping on orders over $ Beyond the Ice Limit: A Gideon Crew Novel (Gideon Crew Series) by Douglas Preston Mass Market Paperback. $ by Douglas Preston Lincoln Child ‧ RELEASE DATE: Effective Engineering Solutions' chief honcho, Eli Glinn, is out of his wheelchair, walking and ready for revenge after his agent Gideon Crew discovered a "restorative, health-giving lotus" on his last adventure (The Lost Island, , etc.).
However, the 16 year wait between THE ICE LIMIT (referring to extremely perilous lattitudes south of 60 degrees S) and BEYOND THE ICE LIMIT promises to be another great novel combining PC's trademark well-researched sci-fi adventure with chills and spills. I don't often give 5 stars. THE ICE LIMIT is worth it. www.doorway.ru: The Ice Limit (): Preston, Douglas, Child, Lincoln, Brick, Scott: Books. Like Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child's earlier collaborations (Relic, Thunderhead, and others), The Ice Limit tools along swiftly, blending nicely drawn characters (excepting, regrettably, the book's true protagonist, the meteorite), a reasonably exciting narrative, and enough graspable science and plausible-seeming theories to bring readers happily up to speed and keep them climax-bound. Not the authors' best effort, certainly, but a fine diversion nonetheless.
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