- Treasure -
by Clive Cussler
Simon
& Schuster, 1988
Price on dust jacket $18.95
Number line 10-1
ISBN # 0-671-62613-2
From the dust jacket, "In Treasure, Clive Cussler
has written his most exciting novel to date, pitting
Dirk Pitt (whom The New York Times has hailed as "the
ultra-capable [hero] with a hound-dog nose for hidden
treasure, contempt for wealth and a Rambo-like distemper
when crossed"), against international terrorism
and a criminal conspiracy that threatens the very
survival of America. The "treasure" that
Pitt seeks, against all the odds, is none other than
the Great Library and Museum of Alexandria, the chief
wonder of the ancient world, containing an incredible
mass of literature, art and knowledge, from the complete
works of Homer and the golden coffin of Alexander
the Great to priceless charts of lost gold, mineral
and oil deposits that could change the balance of
power in the world today... The loss of the library,
burned in 391 A.D., has been considered by scholars
one of the world's great tragedies, but when Dirk
Pitt discovers that the most precious part of it was
saved and hidden, the race is on to recover its secrets
- a race that involves a deadly plot which could unseat
the friendly governments of Egypt and Mexico, expose
America to invasion, economic collapse and political
blackmail, destroy Israel, and plunge a large part
of the world back into savage barbarism. Clive Cussler's
gifts as a storyteller (which prompted tom Clancy,
the author of Red October, to say of Cussler's last
book, "Anyone who can put [it] down, has a stronger
will than I have") have never been better displayed.
He weaves plot upon plot, surprise on surprise, breathtaking
(and sometimes literal) cliffhanger upon cliffhanger,
in a deft and un-put-down-able story that begins intriguingly
in ancient times, when Junius Venator, the library's
curator, a scholar with the gift of action, spirits
its treasures away. With a company of Roman mercenaries,
a small army of slaves, and a fleet of ships, Venator
transports the priceless treasures of the ancients
across an unknown sea to a barren land, where they
are hidden in caverns tunneled by the slaves, only
to see his company slaughtered by a horde of barbarians,
except for the crew of one small merchant ship that
manages to escape... Sixteen hundred years later,
Dirk Pitt finds the ship and its crew, frozen in the
ice of a Greenland fjord, and with the help of a beautiful
young archaeologist, NUMA's sophisticated computers,
and his own do-or-die enthusiasm for adventure, sets
out to find Venator's secret hiding place/ His quest,
which is already difficult (the treasure could be
anywhere in the ancient world), is complicated by
a series of bizarre and threatening events that lead
Pitt into the most deadly challenge of his life; an
airliner crashes, sabotaged, among its passengers
the glamorous and controversial new woman Secretary
General of the United Nations, the White House is
threatened by fanatic zealots in Egypt and Mexico;
Pitt's own father, a distinguished U.S. senator and
presidential advisor, is in danger; a cruise ship
with a distinguished list of passengers, including
heads of state, is hijacked and then vanishes - and
all of these dire happenings seem to be mysteriously
connected to the treasure... Dirk Pitt's chase takes
the reader from the ski slopes of Colorado (with the
most memorable and unique car chase in fiction history)
to the frozen wastes of Tierra del Fuego (with a full-scale
assault on a terrorist stronghold in which he almost
loses his life), by way of a deep-sea dive that reveals
an astonishing secret, to a brilliant scheme of deception
that leads the book to its awesome climax... On reviewer
commented that Clive Cussler's fiction "keeps
you so audaciously entertained you won't want it to
come to a close." Truer words were never written."
This
Clive Cussler novel is one of the most difficult to
find in MINT condition, because the paper it is printed
on tans. Usually only the pages in the first "signature"
are white.