From
Publishers Weekly
Those thinking of abandoning their everyday lives and
starting over again on a tropical island will find Garrison's
latest an invaluable and entertaining instruction manual. The
author's earlier books (Sea Hunter; Fire and Ice; Buried
at Sea)
have shown him a master storyteller/sailor, and this gale force
novel of high seas suspense reinforces that judgment.
In 2001,
the Page brothers, Aiden and Charlie, are in their World Trade
Center office plotting a way to prop up the failing investment
banking business they helm and at the same time respond to a
threatening letter from the Department of Justice. Suddenly,
a passenger jet slams into the building, and the fiery aftermath
presents a possible solution. In the heavy smoke the brothers
become separated, but each escapes the building and disappears.
Months later, Aiden's 15-year-old daughter, Morgan, is mourning
the loss of her father and Uncle Charlie in the Trade Center
when she receives a three-second silent phone call that she insists
is from her father. No one believes her, so she runs away and
makes a 6,000-mile journey in a 27-foot sailboat to search for
him. The brothers, each unaware that the other is alive, flee
independently to Blind Man Island, the South Sea hideaway of
their boss, the secretive Henry Ho Hong — even though Henry
may have been the man who turned them into the Justice Department.
The brothers' journey is fast-paced and exciting, but spunky
Morgan's heroic solo sail is the real nail-biter. There are boatloads
of action, and Garrison comes up with a rarity — a plausible,
entirely original superweapon. The lives of 50 million Americans
hang in the balance. Sailors and landlubbers alike will be up
all night with this one. (Jan.)
FYI: Garrison received $1 million from Disney for the film rights
to his last novel, Fire and Ice.