Gideon's sword

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Average Rating
Series
Gideon Crew volume 1
Publisher
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Publication Date
Varies, see individual formats and editions
Language
English

Description

Introducing Gideon Crew: trickster, prodigy, master thiefAt twelve, Gideon Crew witnessed his father, a world-class mathematician, accused of treason and gunned down.At twenty-four, summoned to his dying mother's bedside, Gideon learned the truth: His father was framed and deliberately slaughtered. With her last breath, she begged her son to avenge him.Now, with a new purpose in his life, Gideon crafts a one-time mission of vengeance, aimed at the perpetrator of his father's destruction. His plan is meticulous, spectacular, and successful.But from the shadows, someone is watching. A very powerful someone, who is impressed by Gideon's special skills. Someone who has need of just such a renegade.For Gideon, this operation may be only the beginning . . .

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Contributors
ISBN
9780446564328
044656432
9780446564335
9780446573726
9781600249969
9781599959139

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Also in this Series

  • Gideon's sword (Gideon Crew Volume 1) Cover
  • Gideon's corpse (Gideon Crew Volume 2) Cover
  • The lost island: a Gideon Crew novel (Gideon Crew Volume 3) Cover
  • Beyond the ice limit (Gideon Crew Volume 4) Cover
  • The pharaoh key (Gideon Crew Volume 5) Cover

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NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
If you enjoy unlikely anti-terrorist operatives, then these tales are what you're looking for. Featuring an art thief turned physicist and an NYPD cop who finds himself hunting jihadis, respectively, both series are fast-paced, suspenseful, and action-packed. -- Mike Nilsson
Gideon Crew and Cam Richter are both tough, independent protagonists who think for themselves. Although the Crew novels involve international terrorism and the Richter novels feature home-grown bad guys, they share a fast pace and nonstop suspense. -- Mike Nilsson
These series follow tough male protagonists through the life changes that occur after they exact some long-overdue revenge. Though the Quinn Colson novels are more violent, the series share a fast pace, white-knuckle suspense, and righteous anger. -- Mike Nilsson
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What doesn't kill you - Johansen, Iris
In these fast-paced, action-packed thrillers, well-prepared and skilled protagonists find that their pasts have come back to haunt them in plots involving Chinese scientists and their secret, possibly deadly projects, as well as dangerous assassins. -- Shauna Griffin

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Jack Du Brul's series featuring geologist (and ex-CIA commando) Philip Mercer is just the thing for readers who crave testosterone-rich tales of danger like those crafted by Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln Child. -- Krista Biggs
Whether writing together or separately, Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln Child create stories featuring exotic and dangerous settings, as does Clive Cussler in his Dirk Pitt series. These novels contain similar elements - treasure or secrets or other intriguing backgrounds, adventure, and high-tech toys. -- Shauna Griffin
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F. Paul Wilson and team authors Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln Child write in the genres of horror, suspense, and science fiction, often within the space of one novel. Their plots are inventive, adventurous, and filled with action and intrigue. Wilson incorporates supernatural elements more often than Preston and Child. -- Jessica Zellers
The adventures are non-stop and the body counts are high in the novels of Scott Sigler and co-authors Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln Child. Their books blur the distinctions between science fiction, suspense, and horror. -- Jessica Zellers
Action, adventure, ancient civilizations, modern-day science, and some creative genre-blurring are all part of Douglas J. Preston and Lincoln Child's irresistible, adrenaline-rich books. Their novels are excellent suggestions for readers who like James Rollins' genre-blending suspense stories and vice versa. -- Krista Biggs
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Gideon Crew, the hero of Preston and Child's new novel, has a complicated backstory. As a boy, he watched as his father, who had taken a man hostage, was shot down by a sniper. Less than a decade later, he learned from his mother that his father had been used by the U.S. government as a scapegoat for a failed intelligence project. After dispatching the man responsible for his father's murder, Gideon is offered a job with a private contractor that does hush-hush work for the government. Gideon's mission: to intercept a Chinese scientist and relieve him of the plans for a top-secret weapon. The mission doesn't go as drawn, however, and Gideon is left with a mysterious string of numbers. Now, working mostly alone, he must determine what the numbers mean. This novel (which is apparently the first installment in a new series) isn't as elegantly written or constructed as the authors' popular Special Agent Pendergast novels, but it does once you get past the backstory hold the reader's interest, and Gideon is undeniably a big-shouldered character, capable of supporting a series.--Pitt, David Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

John Glover's hard-edged, slightly sinister voice (familiar to fans of television's Smallville) sustains Preston and Child's entertaining but slight thriller. In this installment, Gideon Crew, whom Glover imbues with more depth and humanity than the text itself suggests, is seeking revenge for the murder of his father, an Army intelligence officer. But he's interrupted in his mission, conscripted by a clandestine agency to perform a near-suicidal task: to steal the plans for a Chinese WMD. Crew exhibits extreme versatility in accomplishing his task, for when it comes to an impossible mission successfully performed, a better example is the way Glover adds dimension to the novel's cardboard characters and vitality to its overly long backstory. A Grand Central hardcover. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Library Journal Review

The dynamic duo is back! New York Times best-selling writers Preston and Child (www.prestonchild.com), creators of the iconic Agent Pendergast series, strike gold once again with this story about a man dying of an incurable brain disease who is hired by a secretive government organization to steal something from a defecting Chinese scientist. Protagonist Gideon Crew is one clever character, and Smallville's Lionel Luthor-actor John Glover-is the perfect narrator to capture his humor, suspense, and ingenuity. The final scene in New York City's Potters Field is one of the best ever written by Preston and Child, but the entire book is a roller-coaster delight from start to finish. Highly, highly recommended! [See Major Audio releases, LJ 1/11; the Grand Central hc also received a starred review, LJ 1/11.-Ed.]-Joseph L. Carlson, Vandenberg Air Force Base Lib., Lompoc, CA (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

A shadowy quasi-governmental organization hires a highly resourceful art thief-turned-physicist to obtain plans for a mysterious weapon in the first book in Preston and Child's (Fever Dream, 2010, etc.) new series.Gideon Crew was a successful art thief until his mother, on her death bed, informed him that his father had not been the failure he'd always assumed he was, but was in fact set up to take the blame for the mistakes of his superiors. She urges him to seek revenge. After years of preparationincluding getting a job as a physicist at Los Alamoshe enacts his revenge and prepares to devote his newfound free time to fly-fishing. His plans are interrupted by the appearance of a mysterious man in his favorite fishing spot, who offers him a large sum of money to take on a dangerous mission. It seems a secretive organization that does work for the Department of Homeland Security took notice of the work to avenge his father and wants to enlist him to procure the plans to a mysterious weapon being brought to New York by a possible defector from China. As part of his recruitment "pitch," Crew is informed that he suffers from an incurable disease and has a short time to live. Faced with a dwindling set of options, Crew takes the mission and spends the next several days desperately trying to get his hands on the plans without falling into the clutches of Nodding Crane, a deadly operative sent by the Chinese to retrieve the plansand kill anyone who gets too close to them. No reader expects Preston and Child to let too much realism get in the way of a good storynor should theybut there are limits, and the authors sometimes exceed them.While the fun is, for the most part, worth the outlandish coincidences, exceedingly stupid adversaries and/or superhuman feats, it is not worth it by a large margin. Still, Crew is a great character, and this series holds promise.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Gideon Crew, the hero of Preston and Child's new novel, has a complicated backstory. As a boy, he watched as his father, who had taken a man hostage, was shot down by a sniper. Less than a decade later, he learned from his mother that his father had been used by the U.S. government as a scapegoat for a failed intelligence project. After dispatching the man responsible for his father's murder, Gideon is offered a job with a private contractor that does hush-hush work for the government. Gideon's mission: to intercept a Chinese scientist and relieve him of the plans for a top-secret weapon. The mission doesn't go as drawn, however, and Gideon is left with a mysterious string of numbers. Now, working mostly alone, he must determine what the numbers mean. This novel (which is apparently the first installment in a new series) isn't as elegantly written or constructed as the authors' popular Special Agent Pendergast novels, but it does—once you get past the backstory—hold the reader's interest, and Gideon is undeniably a big-shouldered character, capable of supporting a series. Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Preston and Child have written 14 thrillers featuring somewhat restrained investigators (FBI Agent Pendergast and Lieutenant D'Agosta). Here, the duo kick off an action-packed new series introducing Gideon Crew, a brilliant young physicist and con artist on a mission to avenge his father's murder. Upon earning his doctorate, Crew works at the Los Alamos Labs as a high-explosives engineer. Simultaneously, he designs and executes a cunning plot to vindicate his slain father. Eli Glinn, the director of an engineering firm, recognizes Crew's skills and hires him as an independent contractor to analyze and prevent dangerous problems. For his first assignment, Crew must find a Chinese scientist soon to arrive in the United States with plans for a powerful and dangerous weapon. Crew must legally steal the plans for Glinn. The entertaining and engaging plot showcases Crew's sarcastic wit, impulsiveness, and unpredictable luck. VERDICT This exciting action/adventure with a hero reminiscent of Indiana Jones will be a treat for adventure/thriller fans. Paramount Pictures and Michael Bay will produce the movie version. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 9/15/10.]—Jerry P. Miller, Cambridge, MA

[Page 89]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Preston and Child's first in a new thriller series falls short of their usual high standard. In 1996, eight years after 12-year-old Gideon Crew saw his father, an employee of the United States Army Intelligence and Security Command, fatally shot outside his father's Arlington, Va., office, his mother tells him the truth about the killing on her death bed. The older Crew was made the scapegoat for the deaths of 26 spies for the U.S. the Russians caught as a result of a flaw in a new intelligence encryption standard he discovered but higher authority ignored. In the present, Gideon's quest for revenge takes a backseat to an assignment from shadowy Effective Engineering Solutions (introduced in 2001's The Ice Limit), whose people succeed in recruiting Gideon to steal plans for what might be a new Chinese megaweapon from a defecting scientist. That tired and predictable story line isn't helped by a protagonist lacking the quirks of the authors' popular series hero, FBI agent Aloysius Pendergast. (Feb.)

[Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC

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