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Christopher Bonn Jonnes, author of Wake Up Dead, is back with a second, more harrowing
novel, Big
Ice. This
well-researched thriller is thick with tension and suspense. Jonnes
manages to start the book with action, end it with action, and fill
all of the chapters between with action.
Running from his
past, Seth Peterson finds himself living and working in the nation's
capitol for the National Ice Center (NIC). The center is a joint
venture coupling the Naval Ice Center, NOAA, and the Coast Guard.
Their goal is to accomplish the national mission of providing global
ice analyses and forecasts. When hunks of ice calve off from the
Ross Ice Shelf, we are talking about more than a mere iceberg that
is being monitored. Peterson's research may help prepare the world
for when a calving sheet of ice the size of Mexico occurs. Such a
calving will displace enough water to bury coastal cities like New
York, Tokyo and California under more than 200 feet of water.
Dedicating the last twelve months on intense research,
Peterson is finally forced to update the team at the NIC. He has an
acute problem. He suffers from severe panic attacks. These attacks
keep him from being able to speak to groups of people. This phobia
is what caused him to upset his life before and it is once again
threatening to ruin his present.
When his supervisor agrees
to let another team member make the presentation, Peterson thinks
all is well. When the presenter is murdered at the convention, it
isn't long before Peterson realizes the shooter was hoping to kill
him. A break-in at his apartment confirms the suspicion when his
computer disk with all of his research on it is the only thing
stolen during the burglary.
Someone does not want Peterson's
research brought to light and will stop at nothing to ensure his
silence.
This is a smart, hard-hitting thriller. But I
expect no less from Jonnes, who blew me away with his first novel,
Wake Up
Dead. His facts are
intriguing; to think that a natural disaster, worse than any
earthquake is out there waiting to happen is frightening. Jonnes is
skilled at incorporating dialogue, taut chapters and
three-dimensional characters to strengthen and solidify this already
impressive and unique story line. Big Ice is
easy to get into and hard to put down and will be impossible to
forget.
Book Summary:
Reclusive polar ice
researcher, Seth Peterson, has located a doomsday fault, which could
allow the West Antarctic Ice Sheet--a hunk of ice a mile-and-a-half
thick and as big as Mexico--to slide off the continent and flood
coastal cities, ending the world as we know it. Millions of people
worldwide would perish in the resulting chaos and famine.
REVIEWED BY PHILLIP TOMASSO III
DO NOT REPRINT WITHOUT PERMISSION OF
THE AUTHOR, PHILLIP TOMASSO
III
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