Record Details
Book cover

Zero hour : a novel from the NUMA files

Cussler, Clive. (Author). Brown, Graham, 1969- (Added Author).
Book  - 2013
FIC Cussl
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Stamford Available

Other Formats

  • ISBN: 039916250X
  • ISBN: 9780399162503
  • Physical Description 390 pages.
  • Publisher New York : Penguin Group, [2013]

Content descriptions

General Note:
"G.P. Putnam's Sons."
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 31.00

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 039916250X
Zero Hour
Zero Hour
by Cussler, Clive; Brown, Graham
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Kirkus Review

Zero Hour

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

The latest from Cussler (The Storm, 2012, etc.). Cussler stalwart Kurt Austin is attending a Sydney, Australia, symposium when a boring session sends him to the Opera House's steps. He meets cute with a beautiful young theoretical physicist, Hayley Anderson, but before Austin finishes flirting, a boat-helicopter chase rages across the harbor. The boat crashes. Austin spears the helicopter with a burning boat hook. Very Bond initial opening, especially since it develops that the fetching Hayley is enmeshed in spycraft. Papers disappear amid the destruction, and Cecil Bradshaw, of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation, arrives on the scene. Austin is dismissed, but he's intrigued. He calls his National Underwater and Marine Agency cohort Joe Zavala. They follow clues to a flooded, toxic Outback pit mine. Hayley's trapped in the pit. Bradshaw's wounded. An ASIO team's dead. With that, Austin and NUMA are drafted to thwart mad genius Maxmillian Thero's attempt to tap into zero-point energy: the physics of "drawing energy from background fields that are supposedly all around us." It's Tesla's Dynamic Theory of Gravity, once put into practice by a Tesla assistant, only to cause San Francisco's 1906 earthquake. The toxic mine pit was a test site. Heard Island, isolated in the Roaring Forties, is the site of the supergenerator with power sufficient to crack Australia in two. Cussler's usual supertech gadgetry is limited herein, except for a derelict cruise ship converted into a submarine. Russians are involved, and Uncle Sam too, but other nations are oblivious. The action continues postboat-helicopter shootout with a neutrino wave sinking a NUMA ship, then there's a hovercraft-snowmobile set piece battle and a shootout in the volcanic island's bowels, which, in addition to the Tesla-inspired doomsday generator, holds a diamond mine to finance the experiment. A C-minus effort.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - Publishers Weekly Review for ISBN Number 039916250X
Zero Hour
Zero Hour
by Cussler, Clive; Brown, Graham
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Publishers Weekly Review

Zero Hour

Publishers Weekly


(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

This latest NUMA adventure from Cussler and Brown features the heroic members of the National Underwater and Marine Agency-Kurt Austin, Dirk Pitt, Joe Zavala, et al.-battling yet another madman who hopes to conquer the world. But crazed scientist Maxmillian Thero's weapon is unique: it uses of zero-point energy to create machines capable of causing continent-shattering earthquakes. Narrator Scott Brick is skilled at creating accents-a much-needed talent considering that Thero has marked both Australia and Russia as his main targets. Brick treats the book's Aussies, male and female, to a credible, near musical twang. His Russian accents are solid, especially the voice he uses for an oddly likeable Moscow assassin. When it comes to most of the NUMA world-savers, Austin and Pitt included, Brick uses an all-purpose, broadcast-quality stalwart tone, though the down-to-earth Zavala's comments have an added touch of Brooklyn sarcasm. It's the voice of Thero that presents the biggest challenge. The authors describe it as being the result of vocal chords damaged in an intense fire that nearly killed the man and drove him mad. Brick's croak is so effectively garbled and strained one hopes he has his own award-winning voice properly insured against misuse. A Putnam hardcover. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 039916250X
Zero Hour
Zero Hour
by Cussler, Clive; Brown, Graham
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BookList Review

Zero Hour

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Even if Kurt Austin, of the National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA), isn't looking for trouble, it somehow has a way of finding him. Attending a conference in Sydney, Austin just happens to be nearby when a powerboat crashes into the Sydney Opera House. Kurt pulls an injured man out of the wreckage; the man dies but not before muttering a cryptic message ( The heart . . . of Tartarus ) that Austin immediately recognizes as a reference to the deepest prison of the underworld. Then, after Austin notices that the dead man has symptoms of the bends, he starts looking for a mystery deep under the water, but he doesn't expect to find a Bondian megalomaniac who has harnessed the massively destructive power of zero-point energy and is threatening to wreak havoc upon the planet. Unless, of course, Austin and his NUMA team can stop him. The NUMA books are sort of midrange Cussler, not as well crafted as his Isaac Bell series but more exciting than the Oregon Files. Fans of the previous NUMA adventures will find much to enjoy here.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 039916250X
Zero Hour
Zero Hour
by Cussler, Clive; Brown, Graham
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Library Journal Review

Zero Hour

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

NUMA's Kurt Austin is in Australia attending a conference when a casual stroll near the famed Sydney Opera House launches him into his latest adventure. This classic Cussler (The Storm) epic is filled with environmental cataclysms, worldwide danger, and a beautiful girl. The villain this time is a mad scientist who has developed something called "zero point energy," and if he succeeds in his mad plan, Australia will be split in two...to start. Longtime Cussler reader Scott Brick is in top form and shows his talents in handling a number of accents (Australian, Russian, South African, and Irish, among others) with exceptional skill. Brick knows how to keep a Cussler adventure rolling along, and Zero Hour is Cussler and Brick at their best. Verdict Cussler's wide audience makes this a must-have for all libraries. [The Putnam hc was a New York Times best seller.-Ed.]-Joseph L. Carlson, Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.