Ratings19
Average rating3.9
Two years after vanishing into the Sudanese desert, the leader of a British archeological expedition, Professor Harold McCabe, comes stumbling out of the sands, frantic and delirious, but he dies before he can tell his story. The mystery deepens when an autopsy uncovers a bizarre corruption: someone had begun to mummify the professor's body--while he was still alive. His strange remains are returned to London for further study, when alarming news arrives from Egypt. The medical team who had performed the man's autopsy has fallen ill with an unknown disease, one that is quickly spreading throughout Cairo. Fearing the worst, a colleague of the professor reaches out to a longtime friend: Painter Crowe, the director of Sigma Force. The call is urgent, for Professor McCabe had vanished into the desert while searching for proof of the ten plagues of Moses. As the pandemic grows, a disturbing question arises.
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18 primary books25 released booksSigma Force is a 25-book series with 18 primary works first released in 2004 with contributions by James Rollins and Steve Berry.
Reviews with the most likes.
Like Riding A Bike. It had been quite a while - and a few *thousand* books - since I read the prior book in this series. In the intervening years, I've started a few different bookish projects, begun reviewing every book I read, and even met Mr. Rollins himself a few years ago, just before the insanities took over the world. And yet coming back into the world of Sigma Force, to pick up here with Book 12 as I gear up to read an Advance Reviewer Copy of the upcoming Book 17, Tides of Fire, was truly like riding a bike. Even across all the years and all the books, Rollins told enough of the backstory here for me to be able to remember what was going on in this world - without rehashing every minor detail. For example, he would mention Monk's prosthetic hand... without going into the details of that mission (book) and how he lost it. So this made it quite easy indeed to get into the groove of this particular book... and boy, what a book.
There have been several various scifi tales over the years seeking to explain some or all of the Plagues of Moses, and yet Rollins here manages to do it in a way I'd never seen before, while incorporating several other wide ranging myths and techs as well... as Rollins does. So while the driving force is the Plagues of Moses (and one of them in particular), we also see Nikola Tesla and some of the mysteries around his life. We see the mystery of the elephant graveyard. We even get appearances from both David Livingstone *and* Mark Twain. And cutting edge discoveries such as a strange new class of bacteria.
All rolled up into one action packed, near balls to the wall, globe trotting adventure trying to save the world before the forces of... well, misguidedness, let's call it in this case... can try to destroy it in their hubris.
Truly a fun read, and one I'm glad I've come back to after all these years. Very much recommended.
Originally posted at bookanon.com.
James Rollin's writing improves with each book. Standard mix of science and action. The stuff at the end about the animals bordered on nauseating. If you like any book in this series, you'll like this one.
Nope.
The author misused exacerbated and exasperated. The first time I gave a weary shake of my head and continued reading. The second time I was pulled right out of the story. In other words the language misuse exacerbated my exasperation with this story.