| The Orpheus Deception |  | Author: David Stone Publisher: Jove Category: Book
Buy New: $9.99
Avg. Customer Rating: 7 reviews Sales Rank: 1188215
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 544
ISBN: 0515146048 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780515146042 ASIN: 0515146048
Publication Date: March 31, 2009 (In 175 Days) Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Not yet published
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Product Description CIA cleaner Micah Dalton returns for another go-round of the international espionage, government cover-ups, and high-intensity pursuit that have cemented this series in the best of spy fiction.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 2 more reviews...
another good one by Stone (don't worry..no spoilers here) September 17, 2008 David Stone is an incredible author. He is good at characterizations, he's good at plot, he's good at plot twist, he's good at setting the atmosphere and he's good at keeping the reader in suspense. His first book featuring Micah Dalton, The Echelon Vendetta, was superb, and so is this one.
Orpheus Deception picks up where Echelon Vendetta leaves off. I won't go into detail in case someone reads this and hasn't read the first book (but you do really really want to read it). It begins with another attempt on Dalton's life, again in Italy, which is thwarted in the nick of time. From there, an agent from London comes to him with an assignment: he is to somehow release an ex-agent, a Brendan Fitch, who is rotting away in a prison in Singapore. Fitch had signed on as a member of the crew for a tanker called the Mingo Dubai, which was boarded and taken by pirates. However, the Singapore government insists that it sunk, and that Brendan was drunk at the time it happened, thereby causing it. But what's worse for poor Fitch is that his jailers have discovered that he's an agent -- and he has to be retrieved before they can torture any info from him. If this was the entire story, it would still be good, but it's not, by a long shot! This is just the very beginning of an incredible adventure. Never a dull moment, lots of cliffhanging, and action, action action. I loved this book, I love this author, and I absolutely cannot wait until he comes out with another one. Recommended for those who enjoy a bit of intrigue and some incredible action
Never a dull moment July 17, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Precious little is known about author David Stone (a pseudonym) other than that he has engaged in a series of honorable careers, fighting the good fight on behalf of the United States in the military --- with federal intelligence agencies and state-level law enforcement agencies here and abroad --- and comes from an esteemed line of gentlemen who have done the same. One gets the feeling that he has been one of those individuals of whom George Orwell so famously spoke: the rough men who stand ready in the night to do violence against those who would harm decent people who sleep peacefully in their beds. Stone's protagonist, CIA cleaner Micah Dalton, is one of those rough men as well, an old-school agent who runs strongly counter to the perfumed princes who attempt to rein him in.
THE ORPHEUS DECEPTION begins with Dalton on the run, being pursued by his erstwhile employer for his actions at the close of THE ECHELON VENDETTA. For a cleaner, Dalton more often than not leaves behind an even bigger mess. What infuriates his bosses is that he is usually right. It doesn't help his cause though that he insists he is being haunted by the ghost of Porter Naumann, his friend and fellow CIA agent whose brutal death began, and ended, the series of events taking place in THE ECHELON VENDETTA.
Naumann may really be a spirit, or he may be the unfortunate psychological manifestation of an hallucinogenic by-product that Dalton involuntarily ingested. In any event, he is there in Dalton's perception, dispensing advice, even as THE ORPHEUS DECEPTION begins with an almost-successful assassination attempt upon Dalton performed at the behest of Branco Gospic, a Serbian warlord. Gospic is exercising a vendetta of a personal and professional nature against Dalton, and Dalton is determined to respond in kind, even as he is relentlessly pursued by his former employer. However, Dalton is given what is in effect a "get out of jail free" card when a seemingly unrelated event begins to unfold in the Java Sea, where a freighter, the Mingo Dubai, is hijacked and its crew, save two --- a shipsmate and a quisling --- is murdered.
The Mingo Dubai disappears, and the shipmate, a drunken Englishman named Brendan Fitch, is found, cast adrift. Fitch's tale of sea piracy is discounted, and he is blamed for its disappearance due to dereliction of duty. It is quickly discovered, however, that Fitch is Raymond Fyke, a former CIA agent who had disappeared several years before. The CIA wants Fitch back and offers Dalton, who had previously worked with Fitch, the chance to redeem himself by springing Fitch from a Singapore prison with a brutal reputation. Dalton, of course, is reticent to trust his erstwhile boss, not only with his own life, but also with that of Fyke, whose return is desired by the CIA for the purposes of plugging what they regard as a leak.
Fyke, though, has knowledge of more immediate import. He knows that the Mingo Dubai was hijacked, but to what purpose? As Fyke and Dalton slowly come to realize what it is to be used for, and at whose behest, the agents become involved in a race against time to thwart a plot aimed at America's heartland. And meanwhile, Gospic is still pursuing Dalton for yet another reason.
There is never a dull moment in THE ORPHEUS DECEPTION. The plot will make every hair on your body stand on end, and the characters --- from Gospic to Dalton to a minor character running a dry cleaner in a third world hellhole --- are fascinating, particularly the women. Push this book and its predecessor to the top of your "must read" list.
--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub
Thhe Orpheus Deception May 18, 2008 there are times when you have a hard time keeping up but overall it is a good book, worth reading.
"A Diplomatic Crocodile...who knew" April 9, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I listened to this book on CD and was struck by how different readers can really set the tone for a character and a book. Erik Davies did a good job with this novel; however the reader of "The Echelon Vendetta", Firdous Bamji is the true voice of Micah Dalton in my opinion.
David Stone shows another side to a complex character masterfully and I look forward to more about Micah Dalton. There is humor and very poignant moments in this novel that for those who have never served their country might not get. For those that have and do, you will appreciate the nuances of this novel and have a whole new appreciation for the predatory nature of your comrades past and present.
If you are looking for another great author to fill in the time it will take for another Micah Dalton thriller to be released you will take great pleasure in Daniel Silva's novels about an Israeli spy Gabriel Allon!
Good Adventure Story! April 6, 2008 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
This new book picks up with Micah Dalton the CIA cleaner as the central character. Dalton is now living in Venice on the run from the CIA. An assassination attempt is made on him during a marathon race in Venice.He is nearly killed. The perpetrators are found to be a blonde woman who is posing as a runner in the marathon. She has been sent after Dalton by a Serbian warlord named Branco Gospic. A piracy act is done on the ship Mingo Dubai. The boat is captured by the pirates to be used later. Then he is sent to rescue a CIA agent,Ray Fyke who is imprisoned in Changi Prison in Singapore. He is joined by another CIA agent named Mandy Pownall. There is also a mysterious ship named Orpheus. All of these combine to create a giant conspiracy. There is a final showdown with Serbian thugs in the Port of Chicago. This is a good action book that will make for good reading.
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