John Twelve Hawks: The Traveler, Kartoniert / Broschiert
The Traveler
- Book One of the Fourth Realm Trilogy
(soweit verfügbar beim Lieferanten)
- Verlag:
- Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 07/2006
- Einband:
- Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9781400079292
- Artikelnummer:
- 12139125
- Umfang:
- 466 Seiten
- Copyright-Jahr:
- 2006
- Gewicht:
- 516 g
- Maße:
- 203 x 132 mm
- Stärke:
- 25 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 18.7.2006
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Rezension
"This novel's a stunner. . . . You won't want to put the book down." - People"The stuff that first-rate high-tech paranoid-schizophrenic thrillers are made of." - Time
"A fearless, brilliant action heroine (think Uma Thurman in Kill Bill ); a secret history of the world; a tale of brother against brother . . . and nonstop action as the forces of good and evil battle it out. . . . Readers won't regret taking this wild ride." - The Times-Picayune
"Gripping. . . . Fresh and fascinating. . . . Impossible to put down." - Daily News
Klappentext
In London, Maya, a young woman trained to fight by her powerful father, uses the latest technology to elude detection when walking past the thousands of surveillance cameras that watch the city. In New York, a secret shadow organization uses a victim's own GPS to hunt him down and kill him. In Los Angeles, Gabriel, a motorcycle messenger with a haunted past, takes pains to live "off the grid" --- free of credit cards and government IDs. Welcome to the world of The Traveler --- a world frighteningly like our own. In this compelling novel, Maya fights to save Gabriel, the only man who can stand against the forces that attempt to monitor and control society. From the back streets of Prague to the skyscrapers of Manhattan, The Traveler portrays an epic struggle between tyranny and freedom. Not since 1984 have readers witnessed a Big Brother so terrifying in its implications and in a story that so closely reflects our lives.
Auszüge aus dem Buch
PRELUDEKNIGHT, DEATH, AND THE DEVIL
Maya reached out and took her father's hand as they walked from the Underground to the light. Thorn didn't push her away or tell Maya to concentrate on the position of her body. Smiling, he guided her up a narrow staircase to a long, sloping tunnel with white tile walls. The Underground authority had installed steel bars on one side of the tunnel and this barrier made the ordinary passageway look like part of an enormous prison. If she had been traveling alone, Maya might have felt trapped and uncomfortable, but there was nothing to worry about because Father was with her.
It's the perfect day, she thought. Well, maybe it was the second most perfect day. She still remembered two years ago when Father had missed her birthday and Christmas only to show up on Boxing Day with a taxi full of presents for Maya and her mother. That morning was bright and full of surprises, but this Saturday seemed to promise a more durable happiness. Instead of the usual trip to the empty warehouse near Canary Wharf, where her father taught her how to kick and punch and use weapons, they had spent the day at the London Zoo, where he had told her different stories about each of the animals. Father had traveled all over the world and could describe Paraguay or Egypt as if he were a tour guide.
People had glanced at them as they strolled past the cages. Most Harlequins tried to blend into the crowd, but her father stood out in a group of ordinary citizens. He was German, with a strong nose, no. 173;shoulder-no. 173 length hair, and dark blue eyes. Thorn dressed in somber colors and wore a steel kara bracelet that looked like a broken shackle.
Maya had found a battered art history book in the closet of their rented flat in East London. Near the front of the book was a picture by Albrecht Dürer called Knight, Death, and the Devil . She liked to stare at the picture even though it made her feel strange. The armored knight was like her father, calm and brave, riding through the mountains as Death held up an hourglass and the Devil followed, pretending to be a squire. Thorn also carried a sword, but his was concealed inside a metal tube with a leather shoulder strap ....
