Vixen 03 by Clive Cussler

Vixen 03 (Dirk Pitt Adventure, #4) (Dirk Pitt) (Windsor Selection S.) (Dirk Pitt Novels (Audio))

by Clive Cussler

A SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER

'Cussler is hard to beat' Daily Mail

The brilliant fifth Dirk Pitt classic from multi-million-copy king of the adventure novel, Clive Cussler.

Over thirty years ago, on an ultra-secret flight to the South Pacific, the transport plane Vixen 03 vanished. It was believed to be lost at sea. And carrying canisters of the most lethal substance known to man.

Now Vixen 03 has returned to haunt the world. Dirk Pitt, the ace maritime troubleshooter who raised the Titanic, is the only man who can overcome the nightmarish problems involved in retrieving her cargo. And the price of failure is terrifying.

'Clive Cussler is the guy I read' Tom Clancy

'The Adventure King' Daily Express

Reviewed by empressbrooke on

2 of 5 stars

Share
Vixen 03 flips back and forth between Dirk Pitt's discovery of a plane wreck in a Colorado lake and a civil war brewing in South Africa. The connection between the two is pretty clever, but unfortunately, the portions of the book that focus on the South African plot just drag. For a while, I forgot I was even reading a Dirk Pitt novel. Dirk's sections flew by in excitement, but the rest just did not mesh. After enjoying [b: Raise the Titanic|41706|Raise the Titanic! (Dirk Pitt, #4)|Clive Cussler|http://images.gr-assets.com/books/1439783780s/41706.jpg|81973] so much, I was surprised by how much of a step backwards this book took. Glancing over some reviews online, there seems to be a consensus that this is Cussler's weakest novel, so I'm expecting to be back on track with his next book in the series.

As a side note, there is stuff in here that seems racist, but I had a hard time deciding if I should be offended. Unlike some books, it was hard to tell if the comments were the author's voice or not. And, more to the point, since this was written in the '70s before I was born, and before the current PC era, I'm unsure that I should apply my 2008 views to it. At this point I figure that it's a product of an era that I never experienced.

Last modified on

Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 26 June, 2008: Finished reading
  • 26 June, 2008: Reviewed