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Indiana Jones and the Army of the Dead

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $7.99
Manufacturer: Del Rey
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Description
There’s no rest for the weary treasure hunter, but that’s how Indiana Jones likes it. Fresh from spying for the Allies in the thick of World War II Germany, the globe-trotting archaeologist doesn’t need much persuading to join his cohort “Mac” McHale in searching for one of the most coveted of artifacts: the fabled black pearl known as the Heart of Darkness. But the partners in adventure are not alone on their foray into the mysterious jungles of Haiti. German and Japanese agents are in hot pursuit, determined to possess the ebony artifact–and its secrets–for their own sinister purposes. And shadowing them all is an infamous voodoo priest, with powers of both diabolical science and black magic at his command.
On a treacherous odyssey across the Island of the Dead, where the legend of the zombi looms large, spiders, snakes, and booby traps will prove the least of Indy’s challenges. And capturing the prize will be child’s play compared to confronting an enemy unlike any other, whose numbers are legion and nearly impossible to kill–because they’re already dead. . . .
Reviews
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-07-08
Summary: "Army of the Dead Rocks"
Indiana Jones and the Army of the Dead is a fantastic book. It is a very good adventure novel that perfectly captures our favorite daredevil archaeologist. In this book, Indy and his friend Mac fight German and Japanese agents as they trek though the treacherous jungle searching for the fabled heart of darkness, and to add to the immense peril, they're all being chased by a voodoo priest and an army of the living dead! Anyone who enjoyed the Indiana Jones movies is sure to love this fast-paced, action-packed novel. This book has definitely found a place of honor on my bookshelf. Cheers to Steve Perry!
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2010-05-09
Summary: "Indiana Jones and the Army of the Dead"
Indiana Jones and zombies; what a combination! That's what I thought, but it is not really exciting in Indiana Jones and the Army of the Dead by Steve Perry. Indiana Jones is off to Haiti to search for the Heart of Darkness (a black pearl with special powers). But he isn't the only one - so are the Germans and the Japanese! With all this happening there should be a lot of excitement and action. There are some moments that make this book enjoyable, but Indian Jones is better on screen then on paper.
Rating: 4 / 5
Date: 2010-02-02
Summary: "Adventures in Haiti"
In this novel Indiana Jones and Mac seek a cursed pearl in Haiti during WWII, dealing with both the Japanese and Germans, who are also after the pearl. It's a good story and a real page-turner, certainly in the same league as some of the other Indiana Jones novels which came out in the 1990s. There were some quirky things with the attempts at German, but you can't have everything.
Rating: 2 / 5
Date: 2009-12-29
Summary: "The worst entry in the series"
Having read all the other Indiana Jones books, I was looking forward to this one. I enjoyed all but the last two Jones adventures and had high hoped for this one.
It is largely a bust.
Firstly, Steve Perry's writing style is boring. As a professional writer, I have had stories rejected because I switched points of view, and included meaningless descriptors. For some reason, Perry did not suffer the same fate. This book is sadly in need of editing!
Secondly, the research behind the book is good, but when he starts mixing meters and feet in the same chapters, then errs with references to present day issues (from a 1940s story), I put it away. He blew it big time.
Thirdly, zombis. Another zombi story to go along with the rest of them. Enough already.
Fourthly, as other reviewers have noted, Indy is almost a secondary character here. I though he was the hero, not a zomobi priestess.
Fifthly, this book needs editing.
sixthly, this book really needs editing.
You get my point. Perry wrote a bad novel. I hope he writes no more. Actually, I would rather read a Steve Englehart Indiana Jones, or a Michael Fleischer, or Denny O'Neil adventure. These guys can write!
Tim Lasiuta
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-12-11
Summary: "Indy and mac go to Haiti and walk, and walk, and walk, and walk..."
Having been a fan of the Indy novels and Steve Perry I expected this book to be amazing- and it was. For all the wrong reasons.
The story is the main problem. There ain't much of it, and what there is moves in predictable patterns. Indy and Mac walk in the jungle. The Japanese walk through teh jungle following them. The German's walk through the jungle following them (or was it the other way around... ?). A Haitian voodoo man follows all of them astrally. The McGuffin is lame and is easily found once all the walking is done. Then the bad voodoo guy kills almost everybody. Something happens and Indy is triumphant... I guess.
When Indy tells Sallah, "I don't know. I'm making this up as I go," it's a great and funny line. Indy may have been making it up, but Lawrence Kasdan wasn't. It was an intricately plotted story. I got the feeling that Steve Perry was making it up as he went along, throwing in some interesting facts about archaeology to give it verisimilitude, then throwing in needless crap about Indy's hat to make it boring.
This is the seventeenth Indiana Jones novel I've read (James Luceno's Young Indy novel included) and it's probably the biggest disappointment. It won't stop me from reading Steve Perry, or future Indy novels, but I never will get that time back that it took reading it, so...
I give it three stars because it's Indy. Otherwise it's two stars at best. Let's hope they do more books, and let's hope the author has a story to tell. And let's hope it's nothing lame, like zombis.
