<< 1 >>
Rating:  Summary: another thriller about the FBI Review: I continue to enjoy Paul Lindsay's books about the FBI...they are first class thrillers and The Fuhrer's Reserve is as good as the previous offerings...thoroughly enjoyable!
Rating:  Summary: Teleplay Quality Review: I love plots that deal with hidden Nazi treasures. Yet, I put this book down after 125 pages. Life is too short for characters and narative of this mediocre quality. It is the literary equivalent of a really bad made for TV movie. Some day when I am really desperate for something to read I may go back to it just for the art info.
Rating:  Summary: a must read Review: It is a good page turner and it would make a good T V movie.Its fairly technical re Longitudes and Latitudes I found the plot stretches the imagination. I gave it a 7.5 out of 10.
Rating:  Summary: I liked it Review: May not have been the best book ever written and I can't say there is anything original in this one. The most annoying part was having to sit and listen to the FBI agents discover what Deker and his partners in crime had discover 20 pages ago. You could also see the "plot twists" coming from 5 miles off. I am always a sucker for books dealing with a resergeance of the Nazi idology. I was surpised with how much I enjoyed this book it does a wonderful job of keeping you awake
Rating:  Summary: I liked it Review: May not have been the best book ever written and I can't say there is anything original in this one. The most annoying part was having to sit and listen to the FBI agents discover what Deker and his partners in crime had discover 20 pages ago. You could also see the "plot twists" coming from 5 miles off. I am always a sucker for books dealing with a resergeance of the Nazi idology. I was surpised with how much I enjoyed this book it does a wonderful job of keeping you awake
Rating:  Summary: Good Premise Poorly Executed Review: Of the four Paul Lindsay books this is the weakest. It starts out well with the attempted recovery of a cache of masterpiece paintings stolen by the Nazis in WW2. There is some ingenous linkage with numbers on the frames to the location, but as the plot moves along it becomes more and more ridiculous with the mandatory romantic interest and wild shoot-em-ups. The ending is so preposterous that, unlike one review that said "it will leave readers gasping" it left this reader ready to throw up.
Rating:  Summary: Entertaining Review: The Fuhrer's Reserve is a very readable book. Lindsay gives some depth to the main character, FBI Agent Taz Fallon, by giving him emotional issues. The problem is, you still do not really care about him. He is merely an instrument providing a means to an end. The plot is original, and littered with attempted plot twists. What I am trying to say is that I enjoyed reading this book, and I am not upset that I spent my time reading this book, but the plot twists and revelations were as easy to anticipate as sunrise and sunset.
Rating:  Summary: Solid 4 Stars Review: This was a good book, intersesting story. The charcters could have used a little more depth, other then that i liked it.
Rating:  Summary: Exciting Read! Review: This was a very good book to read. The book had two heroes,Taz Fallom and Sivia Roth. Our villains were Curt Decker and the Curator.The Fuhrer's Reserve is a cache of old and valuable paint ings that were stolen and hid by the Nazis(from the Jews of Europe).The paintings are being hunted by a group hoping to bring the Nazis back to power. Fallon and Roth are in hot pursuit of the Criminals hunting for the paintings.There is nonstop action from start to finish of this book.The final identity of the evil Curator is a surprise. There is also a conspiracy that is to be undertaken. This all makes for a surprise ending. You will enjoy this book.Read it.
Rating:  Summary: Another Tour de Force for Paul Lindsay Review: You are in for an education and an adventure in this fourth bok by former FBI agent, Paul Lindsay. When I first saw that the story involved the art works taken by the Third Reich, I was less than enthused as it sounded like a story that would be hard to make current or interesting. That's why Paul Lindsay writes novels and I only dream of doing so. Welcome to the world of great art and all of the nuances that it holds and also to the mind set of those that were responsible for the evils and excesses of the Third Reich. Taz Fallon, an FBI agent who is drawn into the search for the Hitler treasure finds himself willing to bend some rules in order to help Sivia Roth, an art historian who is amazingly easy on the eyes. During their efforts to discover the location of the stolen paintings they are competing with a villian by the name of Kurt Decker (son of "Hitler's commando) who has been hired by the Neo-Natzi establishment to recover the fortune and fund their return to power. The plot has many twists and turns and their are times when you believe all has been revealed, only to find that there is more. Lindsay clearly knows his subject and he tells the tale in a book that is difficult to put down.
<< 1 >>
|