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Rating:  Summary: Ludlum scores another winner! Review: A rather obvious and predictable but very fast-paced and thrilling tale of a deadly virus and an even more sinister conspiracy afoot. When Lt. Col. Jonathan Smith loses his fiancee Sophia Russell to a new Ebola-style bug(how many times has this one been trodden out), he begins his own investigation. Warned by an old school friend(who happens to be in with the bad guys, ominous music burst cue) and tipped off that Siphia was murdered, he vows to tack down her killers. With the help of ex-SAS colonel Peter Howell and Asperger's-syndrome-afflicted Marty Zellenbach who is an ace computer hacker and elctronics genius, his trail leads to Iraq and a secret experiment from Desert Storm involving human guinea pigs and a dormant virus. And how does Victor Tremont, muscling in to control multinational Blanchard Pharmaceuticals, fit in to the conspiracy? It seems that everywhere Jon Smith turns, he is a wanted man - by the FBI, the military and corrupt politicians. Who can he trust? As you read, you will surely guess the ending . . . maybe. The basic character of Smith is obviously plagarised from Joel Converse in Ludlum's earlier classic THE AQUITAINE PROGRESION, and the subject of a doomsday virus may not exactly be original(re:EXECUTIVE ORDERS, PANDORA'S CLOCK and THE COBRA EVENT) but this somehow is such a well-plotted, easy to read book that you cannot help but be intrigued, and does manage to keep the reader hooked in abig way. A great airplane read!
Rating:  Summary: Not a real Ludlum book Review: According to the cover, this book is coauthored by Robert Ludlam and Gayle Lynds. From reading this book, I would guess that Lynds did most of the writing and Ludlum's name was used to sell more copies.Robert Ludlum wasn't a genius and some of his books do have some problems. But, he was great at writing suspenseful, action packed stories. This book has none of the suspense or tension usually found in Ludlum's books. The action scenes aren't very exciting. It is also filled with cliched characters, such as the computer nerd and the retired covert operator. One of the big problems with the Hades Factor is that you know who the bad guys are and what they are up to from the beginning. There is no mystery. The other big problem is that the ending is one big cliche. A good contrast is the Sigma Protocol, Ludlum's last book, which was released at about the same time as the Hades Factor. The Sigma Protocol is a far superior book. It has all the elements that make a Ludlum book so enjoyable. The warning is don't get these "co-authored" imitations of Ludlum. Seek out the real thing.
Rating:  Summary: EXCELLENT THRILLER FROM LUDLUM Review: I absolutely loved this novel from Ludlum considering I have never read anything of his before. This book kept me enthralled from the very first page and would let go. Lt Col Jon Smith (USAMRIID) is trying to investigate the death of his beloved Dr Sophia Russell, who was killed after doing some detective work on a very rare virus that seemed to be kiliing random people across the world. This virus had Ebola-type symptoms and after Sophia goes digging into what sort of virus it is and where it comes from, somebody thinks she is better off dead. Smith enlists the help of 2 friends to uncover a myriad of missing documents, doors slammed shut and unethical scientists that seem to love making terrible viruses and trying them out to see what would happen, but the question is why?? I thought this was a sensational read, not too heavy and very well written. Being a research biochemist myself, I love the way Ludlum incorporated todays technology into a suspense thriller that was able to keep me up all night! Excllent piece of fiction, Mr Ludlum, I will definately be reading everything else that you have written! Highly recommended!
Rating:  Summary: New to Ludlum, fan of Lynds Review: I enjoyed this one! The pace kept the pages turning. While the plot wasn't necessarily original, the characters were interesting (Marty with his 'Zounds!' and mild autism). I do like biological terror books and hadn't read one in a long time, so this fit the bill. Plus, she mercifully didn't throw the remaining couple together at the end. I look forward to more books in the series.
Rating:  Summary: Pale version of Clancy Review: I have read this and it is earily similar to other tales of deliberately introduced viral plagues such as that of Tom Clancy and Robin Cook. However, the excruciatingly plodding and predictable plot and straining of credibility to the breaking point render it painful to read. Examples: Erasing all the data on one topic in all the computers in research centers around the world in 2 hours. Has not the author heard of tape or disk backup? Cutting out a page in a lab notebook to surrepticiously remove data without detection. Hello, all the lab notebooks that I am familiar with have prenumbered pages.
Rating:  Summary: Derivative, but with potential Review: When THE MATARESE COUNTDOWN appeared, I wrote a scathing (and well-deserved) review of the worst book Robert Ludlum had ever written. In that review, I suggested that Ludlum either retire or rediscover the passion and inventiveness that marked his early work. With the help of Gayle Lynds, he seems to be making a comeback. THE HADES FACTOR will be familiar to long-time Ludlum readers. The protagonist, Lt. Colonel Jonathan Smith, M.D., faces a conspiracy of monumental proportions aided by only a few long-time acquaintances and a beautiful sidekick. Yet the Ludlum-Lynds tandem breathes new life into this somewhat stale framework. The result is a story that moves along fairly well (although too hastily at times) with much better character development than his most recent work (although one would like to see a little bit more of Smith's background, it will likely be covered later in the series). In particular, I very much enjoyed Martin Zellerbach, the computer genius with Asperger's Syndrome who I sincerely hope will make appearances in other Covert-One novels. Unfortunately, the plot remains problematic. Indeed, THE HADES FACTOR's storyline is almost a mirror image of the most recent Tom Clancy offering, RAINBOW SIX. Without giving too much away, you have a killer virus sprung on the world with ulterior motives (profit this time, not ecological purity as in Clancy's novel). The derivative plot is not the only problem here, but the others are minor in comparison--for instance, the Zellerbach character is drawn a bit too cartoonish despite Ludlum and Lynds's best intentions, but again, this could be touched up in later books. The book is obviously intended to be a jumping off point for a new series of books (all collaborations between Ludlum and other authors one suspects) a la Tom Clancy's OP CENTER. There is definite potential here for sequels, but let's hope that Ludlum and his future partners become more imaginative with their plotlines.
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