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The Prometheus Deception [Paperback]

Robert Ludlum
2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: St Martins Pr (Dec 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0312281226
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312281229
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Robert Ludlum
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Review

"Rarely has any writer of espionage novels come up with such an ambitious design that churns on so many levels."--"Chicago Tribune"
"Explosive."--"San Francisco Chronicle"
"Reading a Ludlum novel is like watching a James Bond film: The action is so slickly paced, the political details so all-consuming, the weapons and women so blatantly steeped in sex appeal...all in the name of discovering a truth that involves complicated weapons, wiley governments, and buxom blondes. Hey, works for us."
-Rebecca Ascher-Walsh, "Entertainment Weekly"
"[Ludlum's] most ingenious novel yet.... In just a few scenes...Ludlum instills a year's worth of "Harvard Business Reviews," and provides a dead-on picture of contemporary corporate strategy.... Ludlum has been among the very few novelists who have taken the trouble and write about such market forces. Two hundred million copies later, the market has returned the compliment."
- "The New Yorker"
"A spy thriller that should keep even t --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

The ultimate spy. After fifteen years as a brilliant master spy, Nick Bryson has disappeared into anonymity as a professor at an exclusive college in western Pennsylvania-- until he's suddenly lured back into the game.
The ultimate threat. Recruited by the CIA, he's been commissioned to track the moves of the Directorate. Once, the ultra-secret intelligence agency was Bryson's training ground. Now it's a multinational terrorist conspiracy bent on global domination.
The ultimate deception. But to eliminate the core of corruption means plunging into his own past, investigating the motives of a beautiful stranger who may be his greatest downfall, and infiltrating a secret nexus of power called Prometheus that holds the terrifying clues to his past-- and the even more terrifying possibilities of the future...
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
By tgaston
Format:Mass Market Paperback
Secret organisations without accountability and a sole agent seeking the truth are good quality ingredients for what should be a novel of intrigue and suspense. Instead the story falls flat and evolves into a tortured and convoluted conspiracy tale of Orwellian proportions.

Who is the good guy, who is the bad guy? Punch drunk by a fusillade of disjointed plot twists more in keeping with a pantomime than a novel, I no longer cared? The author uses cliché and coincidence in abundance and the lack of originality shows.

With better writing and more proficient editing this could be a good story, however, it reads like a debut novel. I am sure that other Ludlum fans will be as disappointed as I was.

Despite his earlier successes, the only way I can see this being made into a film is if Scooby Doo plays the lead.

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Amazon.com:  170 reviews
85 of 92 people found the following review helpful
Calliope Would Approve Of Mr. Ludlums Prometheus 2 Nov 2000
By taking a rest - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Wherever you keep your favorite works by Mr. Ludlum, "The Prometheus Deception" deserves equal space. It has been too long since there has been a Ludlum book that belonged with the best of what he has written. "The Hades Factor", was to some unknown degree his work, it was wretched, and even though I am an admirer who has read all his published works, that co-authored mess received a one star rating. A rating denoting a book that should have never left the realm of Hades.

This is top tier writing from Mr. Ludlum. To the extent there appears to be familiarity, it usually is due to the number of imitators that have tried to emulate the real masters of this genre like John Le Carre, and Mr. Ludlum. The imitators are usually one hit mediocrities whose borrowing from the real craftsmen may put a nick or two to a work, but after 30 years and 22 novels, Mr. Ludlum stands, if not alone, then certainly with very few peers.

This work will bring veteran readers back to the days of the original "Matarese" and "Bourne" books, in terms of their complexity, their cadence, and quality. This book is not perfect, but in spite of those readers whose constant refrain of, "it could have been better"; this is escapist fiction at its best. And while many readers, myself included, can romanticize the memories of the first book or two we read by Mr. Ludlum, if you actually do go back, like many memories they are selective. A subsequent book rarely compares to the thrill of finding a new Author and enjoying that first read. "Prometheus", for first time Ludlum readers, will remain a favorite, as the original "Matarese" has for me.

Mr. Ludlum has managed to reinvent some of the relationships from the Cold War in this construct of deceit, this nesting of lies within one another, just as Matryoshka Dolls hold an uncertain number within, with each getting smaller, until the final number is known. It is the same, as there are more deceptions than the one named on the cover, and some are not really deceptions at all. Does double deception equal truth? You can decide for yourself as Ludlum skips around to the familiar haunts of, Geneva, Brussels, Moscow, Washington, and a dozen others. This time the events are as well done as his original early works. Mr. Ludlum has clearly learned about the newest technologic exotica, how it works, and how it can be used. This is not generic phrase dropping he really knows the material.

The book is not perfect; please note Mr. Ludlum, video cameras do not use "film", never have, and never will. The book also builds on situations and people that are non-fiction, but to tell his story realistically, to spin the tale with substitute players it would have been just as obvious who the real world counterparts are, would not have been credible, and would have detracted from the book.

Not every idea is new, but how many new books are truly absolutely original? The difference is that Mr. Ludlum can write, so everything old and badly written, is new again, and a pleasure to read.

If you have never read this writer's work, this is a great place to start. If you are a veteran, you will love it, and if "The Hades Factor" is all you have known of Mr. Ludlum, throw it out, and forget it, that book had nothing of this man's talent within it.

And as an added bonus, this book shares the genetic makeup of "Matarese" and "Bourne". When you read the book you will understand, and be pleased.

54 of 58 people found the following review helpful
The best Ludlum in at least a decade 7 Nov 2000
By Kenneth Goldman - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Maybe because I do so much flying for work, I've read a lot of Ludlum, but "The Prometheus Deception" really blew me away. For one thing, I happen to work in the tech sector, and the book was really smart in the way it touched on that world. I guess Ludlum's been writing books for three decades, but it turns out he really keeps up, the way a reality-based novelist ought to. Tom Clancy, watch your back! For another thing, the plot is incredibly inventive: the story elements in the first forty pages alone would have sufficed for a dozen run-of-the-mill thrillers. And then it just doesn't stop. Nobody's going to confuse Ludlum with Henry James, or Graham Greene for that matter. The writing is strong and vivid, but this is more of an amusement park ride than a wallow in existential despair. "Brighton Rock" it ain't, and thank god for that. I did have some complaints: the hero, Nicholas Bryson, is actually too skillful - hell, he's practically invincible, to the point that plausibility is a bit strained. I miss the slight cluelessness of some of Ludlum's earlier protagonists, like Noel Holcroft or Joel Converse. But these are minor misgivings. Overall, this novel--which I started on a plane from Seattle to New York and finished on the back again -- left me with a great buzz. As a Ludlum fan, I also found it heartening to think that there might be more like this one to come. This summer I read "The Hades Factor," or the first half of it anyway. It was shockingly bad. And since "The Apocalypse Watch" and "Matarese Countdown" were sort of lame, I'd begun to worry that Ludlum had run out of steam. "The Prometheus Deception" put that worry to rest. The guy's back, and at the top of this game.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Ludlum's best thriller so far! 31 Oct 2000
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
I haven't read all of Ludlum's novels, but quite a few and this one is certainly his best yet. I like the international intrigue in it as he takes us on a journey around the world where there are terrorist activities everywhere. Who's behind it all? Well that's a surprise. There's plenty of action and suspenseful scenarios. I also appreciated that this book is kept shorter than his previous works which makes this book a faster read. Another brand new book that I enjoyed a lot and it is strongly recommended as it is along the lines of Ludlum's new book, but it is faster paced is the international megathriller "The Consultant" by Alec Donzi.
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