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SPECIES

A masterful tale that involves Neanderthals, espionage, and murder.

Awards & Accolades

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A techno-thriller focuses on a shocking archaeological discovery.

In this novel, which features a mix of genres, epochs, and life forms, Fundin takes readers on a vertigo-inducing trip from one corner of the globe to another. It takes a lot of ink to cover so much territory (mental and physical), but the book is so fast-paced that its 350-plus pages never get ponderous. The story opens during the Cold War in an East Berlin divided into politically opposed factions. Russian spy Igor Gerasim Klurov, a nuclear scientist and sergeant in the Strategic Space Forces, is perplexed when an anonymous driver picks him up at the airport and whisks him through the city streets as they head toward “the source of the secret.” What secret? That enigma swirls around a startling archaeological find: 40,000-year-old fossilized Neanderthal skeletons. Homo sapiens committed what is deemed to be the first genocide in history—the systematic extinction of the Neanderthals, with whom they shared the planet. Homo sapiens took over the world, but eventually they were threatened by vengeful neo-Neanderthals, determined to wipe them out. Modern-day scientists use the skeletons to map the Neanderthals’ genome, which poses a scientific and ethical dilemma: Should they be cloned? Thus begins a tumultuous mystery/thriller in ever changing locations and time periods as factions fight for control of the skeletons. Frightening covert medical research in a hospital, punctuated with murders and all manner of subterfuge, drives the well-crafted plot. With one unpredictable twist after another, things get even more complex when readers learn that many of the characters are not at all who they seem. Some have assumed false identities. The good guys are actually the bad guys—or are they? The book concludes with a philosophical and existential issue that is eerily reflective of today’s societal ills and encompasses the questionable future of humanity. Fundin’s skill in weaving seemingly unrelated elements into a cohesive, logical storyline makes for a novel that readers will quickly devour. Fans of Robin Cook and John le Carré will be spellbound.

A masterful tale that involves Neanderthals, espionage, and murder.

Pub Date: Sept. 29, 2020

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Asioni Press

Review Posted Online: Sept. 12, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2020

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CRYPTONOMICON

Detail-packed, uninhibitedly discursive, with dollops of heavy-handed humor, and set forth in the author’s usual...

Stephenson’s prodigious new yarn (after The Diamond Age, 1995, etc.) whirls from WWII cryptography and top-secret bullion shipments to a present-day quest by computer whizzes to build a data haven amid corporate shark-infested waters, by way of multiple present-tense narratives overlaid with creeping paranoia.

In 1942, phenomenally talented cryptanalyst Lawrence Waterhouse is plucked from the ruins of Pearl Harbor and posted to Bletchley Park, England, center of Allied code-breaking operations. Problem: having broken the highest German and Japanese codes, how can the Allies use the information without revealing by their actions that the codes have been broken? Enter US Marine Raider Bobby Shaftoe, specialist in cleanup details, statistical adjustments, and dirty jobs. In the present, meanwhile, Waterhouse’s grandson, the computer-encryption whiz Randy, tries to set up a data haven in Southeast Asia, one secure from corporate rivals, nosy governments, and inquisitive intelligence services. He teams up with Shaftoe’s stunning granddaughter, Amy, while pondering mysterious, e-mails from root@eruditorum.org, who’s developed a weird but effective encoding algorithm. Everything, of course, eventually links together. During WWII, Waterhouse and Shaftoe investigate a wrecked U-boat, discovering a consignment of Chinese gold bars, and sheets of a new, indecipherable code. Code-named Arethusa, this material ends up with Randy, presently beset by enemies like his sometime backer, The Dentist. He finds himself in a Filipino jail accused of drug smuggling, along with Shaftoe’s old associate, Enoch Root (root@eruditorum.org!). Since his jailers give him his laptop back, he knows someone’s listening. So he uses his computing skills to confuse the eavesdroppers, decodes Arethusa, and learns the location of a huge hoard of gold looted from Asia by the Japanese.

Detail-packed, uninhibitedly discursive, with dollops of heavy-handed humor, and set forth in the author’s usual vainglorious style; still, there’s surprisingly little actual plot. And the huge chunks of baldly technical material might fascinate NSA chiefs, computer nerds, and budding entrepreneurs, but ordinary readers are likely to balk: showtime, with lumps.

Pub Date: May 4, 1999

ISBN: 0-380-97346-4

Page Count: 928

Publisher: Avon/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 1999

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THE TRAP

Raise the Union Jack for Emma Makepeace!

Third in a fast-moving British spy series featuring a woman in MI6.

The G7 meets in Scotland in a few days, and the prime minister’s office is “terrified that something is going to go wrong with the gathering.” MI6, the secret intelligence service, learns that a Russian assassin plans to murder a head of state there. But who’s the killer? Who’s the target? And what’s to be done about it? MI6 assigns Emma Makepeace to prevent disaster. Against her wishes, she’s partnered with homicide detective Kate Mackenzie. But their chemistry works. They make an effective team, with Emma (not her real name) as the leader. They start by looking into a Russian émigré named Nick Orlov, whom they see talking on his cell phone, flatly refusing to do something. He’s visibly frightened, so Emma approaches him on a ruse and begins wheedling her way into his confidence. Soon she agrees to his dinner invitation, and—well, she’s never seduced anyone before, but it may be necessary to set a honey trap in service of king and country. Bond—James Bond—wouldn’t have thought twice, of course, that martini-drinking alley cat. Speaking of whom, not since 007 has there been such a worthy spy as Emma Makepeace. She’s tough and smart and has a particular talent for faking emotion. “Being able to cry on cue is a vastly under-rated skill,” she notes, and she uses it when she’s in a tight spot with Orlov. The latter’s enemies are setting him up, luring him into their own trap. She wants to get him out of it, both because it’s her job and because she’s come to like the guy. And she has other quirks: “Some people meditate to deal with stress. Emma picked locks.” Fans of Ian Fleming’s work are sure to enjoy Emma Makepeace. No, she isn’t a Bond clone, although they could be cousins. Near the culmination of a bloody fight with a mortal enemy, she declares, “His Majesty says hello.” How very British.

Raise the Union Jack for Emma Makepeace!

Pub Date: Sept. 3, 2024

ISBN: 9780593972212

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Bantam

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2024

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