Skip to main content

Book 27: The Great Train Robbery, by Michael Crichton


Finished July 28, 2022


This is a tight, fast-paced book that combines historical narrative and supreme story telling. Somehow, Crichton manages to weave an accurate mystery from a story to which every reader knows the ending. Nevertheless, it's an edge-of-your seat telling of this robbery of gold from a train in 19th Century London.

Crichton also paints a vivid picture of life in Victorian England at various socio-economic levels.

This is an intriguing, tragic, lively story, told at a pace and in a depth of scene-setting that shows a level of skill few writers achieve. 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Book 40: A Higher Call, by Adam Makos

 Finished October 29, 2022 The subtitle of this book is, "The Incredible True Story of Combat and Chivalry in the War-Torn Skies of World War II" and the book does not disappoint.  Painstakingly recreated by author Adam Makos, this story is lovingly told, introducing new generations to the miraculous story of an American pilot and his German savior.  A Higher Call   tells the story about  Franz Stigler , a German  fighter ace  of the  Luftwaffe  who flew a  Messerschmitt Bf 109 , and  Charlie Brown , a 21-year-old American pilot of a  Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress  named 'Ye Old Pub'.  Five days before Christmas in 1943, the Ye Old Pub was involve in a bombing mission over Germany. It was a mission that experienced severe casualties, and the Ye Old Pub took on extensive damage. One engine was out. The tail was missing parts which made navigation very difficult. The nose cone was obliterated, which brought the frigid win...

Book 44: Live Not by Lies, by Richard Dreher

  Date Finished: December 6, 2022 One of the most powerful and life-changing books I've ever written.

Book 10: The Less People Know About Us, by Axton Betz-Hamilton

  Finished March 14, 2022 This memoir chronicles the author's identity theft story, which involved a dysfunctional childhood, a passive yet faithful father, and a self-absorbed mother who sacrificed everything and everyone on the alter of her own self-involved fantasies.  This poor girl managed to emerge fairly normal (other than the fact that she doesn't live with her husband for large chunks of the year). She managed to forgive her mother, stay close to her father, and finish her education. Sadly, she does not plan to have children, which is understandable, given her mother's attitudes toward her own child (her mother went to her 30th high school reunion and never mentioned she had a daughter; and mentioned in a Facebook message that the worst day of her life was the first day her husband left her in the house with the baby). This is normal for narcissistic personality types, because raising a child with love requires that you put the child first, which is hell for people...