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Book Review of The Wrecker (Isaac Bell, Bk 2)

The Wrecker (Isaac Bell, Bk 2)
reviewed on + 211 more book reviews


Don't forget to take a breath every now and then, this book is a race

What the author(s) do with this series: Clive Cussler and Justin Scott know how to write a book. This is part of the series called the Isaac Bell Adventures. This paragraph applies to all books in this series. Isaac is an investigator for a private firm whose motto is that the always get their man The books are set in the early 1900's and are based on the author's fascination with the leading technologies of the time â things like fast (by their standards) trains, automobiles and ships. New technologies are introduced like aeroplanes and talking pictures. Depending on the book, many of the social issues of the day are woven into the story such as strikes and strike breakers, gangs running businesses, stock speculators and manipulators as well as later in the series the storm clouds of what will become World War I. The author is skilled at bringing in the details of how society works in that era, such as how beef makes it to NYC, or how different strata of society operate in SFO

Do you need to read this series in order: Probably not, but I think you will miss out on the character development of the protagonist and his lady friend.

Triggers: there is an ample supply of violence â in this book it's at a âwar timeâ level -- people die, from violence (fires, gun shots, bombs, crashes, knives, beatings, accidents). Some of the violence is directed at kids.

The wrecker is about a man that wrecks steam trains and Isaac Bell who tries to stop them. It's fascinating but exhausting as our detective races back and forth across the US to try to prevent train wrecks and to try to catch the wrecker. It's 1907 and it's still a very wild country.