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Book Synopsis

Tags in : ebook , epub , AUDIOBOOK , by ePub (.epub) , book review ,

Latest Impressions

  • Pretty good bubble gum fiction

    4
    By iPad app really needed!
    Glad it wasn't more than 8 bucks, though. I ejoyed reading it.
  • Fast Paced Thru & Thru!

    4
    By alysco2003
    There was not a slow part to this book, whatsoever! I finished in less than two days- only because m a homeschool mom. I'm an instant fan and getting the next one.
  • Make it a movie.

    5
    By Gambooo
    Great book.
  • My First Beck Novel...Will Not Be My Last!

    4
    By Shartorius
    Okay...so let's get the obvious out of the way first. Let's talk briefly about what this book isn't. This isn't Hemingway. This isn't Verne. This isn't a biological thriller based on years of research or field work, nor is it an attempt to get a trained zoologist, biologist or geologist to sit up and take note of the terrifying plausibility of the story. This IS fiction. Very good fiction. A small jet falls to earth over Antarctica at terminal velocity, plowing through the thick ice cap...and through the roof of a complex cave system that had been sealed from the eyes of man for millennia...containing creatures that had been left to develop on their own for hundreds of millions of years. A rescue party consisting of scientists and Green Berets is dispatched to search for survivors of the plane crash--and to investigate a possible signature of billions of barrels of oil, the presence of which was revealed by the plane's impact. None of this first team is ever heard from again. Enter protagonist Captain Alex Hunter, leading a team of Special Forces and a second team of scientists to find the missing search party. They're not alone, however. The possibility of that much oil lures others to stop the Americans from completing their mission. In addition, fantastic creatures with deadly intent await Alex and his group in the subterranean tunnels. One of these is a gargantuan monster of myth with a keen intelligence and a taste for human flesh. The action is nonstop and very well executed. The pseudo-science is fantastical, but stops short of being outright ridiculous. The novel doesn't try to be a doctoral dissertation on extinct creatures, but neither does it have you stretching disbelief to the point where you're flung out of the story. Paperback (and electronic) fiction is, by and large, one of the cheapest forms of entertainment. This aside, when I rate a book, the bottom line is this: does the book deliver enough fun for the cost of admission? And with "Beneath", the answer is a resounding "YES".