8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Mr. Ludlum Always Respected His Readers, 9 Nov 2002
When Mr. Ludlum passed away recently the readers of his work lost one of the true originals in a genre that has becoming overcrowded with imitators. Not all of his books were as special as a given person's favorite, however he wrote with the knowledge that made his stories credible. This second book in, "The Covert One Series", is as bad as and possibly worse than the initial volume in the series. The obituary that I read stated he was working on three additional books before he died that will be published. I hope someone has the integrity to publish the work if it was his or be candid with where the book was when he stopped working upon it. At the very least these Covert One amalgams that clearly had a minimal amount of his involvement should not be the final works to carry his name. That would be a travesty of this man's real books, and to his memory.
Between the last of this series and this mess, we had, "The Prometheus Deception", a few minutes with that book proves the difference between a Robert Ludlum Book, and Robert Ludlum's Covert Collaboration. This book is bad from the cover. The word, "Cassandra", has a very specific meaning and it has absolutely nothing to do with this book's contents. In the first few dozen pages you will read the most ridiculous writing. A man is blown back by a shockwave and is unconscious; upon waking he not only can identify the explosive used but how it was detonated. His explanation is absurd, the material is absurd as it is the last thing that would have been used, and the reasons are much clearer than the preposterous statements.
How about the fact that NASA has learned to defy one of the basic laws of nature? Great, explain it to me, don't just toss it in a sentence and expect me to take your word for Science Fiction that would challenge Star Wars. But this continues throughout the book, "military grade bullets", what was military about them? How do you hide behind a Grand Piano so that "expert assassins" shred the piano with these magic bullets and miss you?
Probably the most offensive example of lazy writing, but by no means the only example was as follows. If you wish to demonize someone it's bad enough to drag up the most overused group of the 20th Century and tie the person/company to them. When you then state an absolute falsehood about a fact that anyone who has read about the Historical Period being used would identify as ridiculous, the writer goes beyond lazy, to something just above mentally inert.
There are facts stated at the beginning that change by a factor of 600% later in the book, and other events that are too implausible to mention here.
Mr. Ludlum was one of the best. Having read these Covert One pieces of trash, I am convinced he had little to do with them. Compare any 10 pages from one of his books to one of these 2 alleged collaborations and decide for yourself. My library of this man's work has come to an end as soon as I toss these two in the recycle bin.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The Cassandra Compact, 27 Jun 2001
By A Customer
The story line is strong, typical of Ludlum set up.A virus has to be stopped from getting out of Russia. However the book lacks the "Ludlum" professional characters to carry it through, thereby undermining the seriousness of the situation.
Smith goes to Russia and back as if he is on holiday. Nobody really appears in any sense of danger.
Perhaps the first Ludlum novel with no tension! with no suprises!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A maze of deceipt that makes you question if its fiction., 6 Dec 2001
A greatly thought out concept and storyline that keeps you hanging on right until the very last minute, without all the unnecessary over expressiveness of other authors within this field.
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