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![Terminal Freeze (Jeremy Logan Series Book 2) by [Lincoln Child]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/512cQcVKckL._SY346_.jpg)
Terminal Freeze (Jeremy Logan Series Book 2) Kindle Edition
Lincoln Child (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • In this riveting, high-octane thriller, an ancient creature is inadvertently released to wreak havoc on the inhabitants of a desolate arctic landscape.
Alaska's Federal Wilderness Zone is one of the most dangerous and inhospitable places on Earth. For paleoecologist Evan Marshall, an expedition to the Zone offers an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study the mounting effects of climate change. But once there, Marshall and his intrepid team make an astonishing discovery: an enormous prehistoric animal encased in solid ice. Despite repeated warnings from the local village, and Marshall's own mounting concern, the expedition sponsors want the creature cut from the ice, thawed, and revealed on a live television spectacular…But then the creature disappears and an unspeakable horror is unleashed.
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAnchor
- Publication dateDecember 24, 2008
- File size2762 KB
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Lincoln Child has a well-earned reputation for writing solid thrillers." --Tampa Tribune
"Child's superior writing raises this above the pack."--Publishers Weekly
"Child whips up a tasy thriler." --St. Louis Post-Dispatch
"Few writers do it better than Child."--Booklist
"Fast paced . . . Page-turning action."--Denver Post
From the Paperback edition.
Review
“Few writers do it better than Child.” Booklist
“Fast paced . . . Page-turning action.” Denver Post
“Lincoln Child has a well-earned reputation for writing solid thrillers.” Tampa Tribune
“Clever . . . A sci-fi mystery thriller.” San Jose Mercury News
“Child whips up a tasty thriller.” St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“Lincoln Child’s novels are both thrilling and tantalizing, always managing to stay one step ahead of readers’ expectations.” Vince Flynn
“Child’s thriller will be remembered as one of the best of the year. Highly recommended.” Library Journal
“Child delivers a well-crafted and literate science-fiction thriller.” Publishers Weekly
“Top-notch science fiction.” Texas Star
“Harrowing and brilliantly conceived.” Clive Cussler
“Child combines the page-turning action of a thriller with science-fiction tropes.” Rocky Mountain News
“This is a page turner for sure, and the conclusion is a wild and crazy shocker.” Kingston Observer
“You won’t want to stop reading until the last word.” Chatham Courier
“A tale of growing paranoia and fear.” Mystery News
“The plot is as fast-paced as a riptide, and the ending will have the readers’ hearts drumming in their chests.” Free Lance-Star
“A fascinating story that grabs you and won’t let go.” Spectrum
“A slick, savvy, intelligent thriller with a scary, sticks-in-your-brain climax.” Steve Berry
From the Hardcover edition. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
About the Author
Amazon.com Review
A breathtaking discovery at the top of the world...
A terrifying collision between modern science and Native American legend...
An electrifying new thriller from New York Times bestselling author Lincoln Child.
Two hundred miles north of the Arctic Circle lies Alaska’s Federal Wildlife Zone, one of the most remote and inhospitable places on Earth. But for paleoecologist Evan Marshall and a small group of fellow scientists, an expedition to the Zone represents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to study the effects of global warming.
Everything about the expedition changes, however, with an astonishing find. On a routine exploration of a glacial ice cave, the group discovers an enormous ancient animal, encased in solid ice. The media conglomerate sponsoring their research immediately intervenes and arranges the ultimate spectacle--the creature will be cut from the ice, thawed, and revealed live on television. Despite dire warnings from the local Native American village, and the scientific concerns of Marshall and his team, the “docudrama” plows ahead... until the scientists make one more horrifying discovery. The beast is no regular specimen--it may be an ancient killing machine. And they may be premature in believing it dead.
In this riveting new thriller, Lincoln Child weaves together a stunning Arctic landscape, a terrifying mythic creature, and a pervasive mood of chaos--and fear. With Terminal Freeze, Child demonstrates why he has become a major bestselling author, and why his novels electrify and enthrall so many.
Amazon Exclusive: An Essay by Lincoln ChildWhen people ask why I write thrillers, I frequently give this answer: when I was in nursery school, my parents once gave me an empty notebook. As you might expect, I filled the first few pages with childish scrawls. But then I turned to the last page and drew something so frightening, I could never ever bring myself to look at it again.
That’s basically what I’ve been trying to do ever since: write a story so scary, even I wouldn’t dare read it.
Whether I’ve accomplished that in Terminal Freeze is your call to make. But while putting the novel together, I was careful to choose elements that increased my personal uneasiness factor. A forbidding and dangerous landscape, far from the safety and comfort of civilization. A deserted army base, unused for half a century, full of dead-ends and dark forgotten corners. And that most atavistic of terrors: a vicious enemy, as deadly as it is mysterious, that stalks and kills with impunity--and an apparently limitless appetite for death.
So I hope you’ll consider Terminal Freeze my contribution to that time-honored literary genre, the Campfire Tale From Hell. We’ve all heard them: the Thing hiding in the bedroom closet; the hook-wielding lover’s lane murderer. They tend to stay with you into the cold light of day, and they can be damnably hard to forget. If I’ve managed to even approach the level of fear that kind of story evokes, then I’ve done my job as a storyteller.
That childhood notebook of mine is now long gone. And yet I often think of it still, and wonder if--even today--I might have a little difficulty turning over that final page.
(Photo © Kramer Images)
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
"Hey, Evan. Lunch?"
Evan Marshall put the ziplock bag aside and stood up, massaging his lower back. He'd spent the last ninety minutes with his face inches above the ground, collecting samples from the glacial sediment, and it took his eyes a moment to adjust. The voice had been Sully's, and now Marshall made him out: a squat, slightly portly figure in a fur-lined parka, standing, arms crossed, thirty yards up the steep valley. Behind him rose the terminal tongue of the Fear glacier, a rich, mysterious blue riddled with white fracture lines. Large ice boulders lay scattered along its base like so many monstrous diamonds, along with daggerlike shards of ancient lava. Marshall opened his mouth to warn Sully against standing so close: the glacier was as dangerous as it was pretty, since the weather had turned warmer and the ice front was calving off deadly chunks at an unprecedented rate. Then he thought better of it. Gerard Sully was proud of his position as nominal leader and didn't like being told what to do. Instead, Marshall just shook his head. "I think I'll pass, thanks."
"Suit yourself." Sully turned toward Wright Faraday, the party's evolutionary biologist, who was busying himself a little downslope. "How's about it, Wright?"
Faraday glanced up, watery blue eyes oddly magnified behind tortoiseshell frames. A digital camera dangled from a heavy strap around his neck. "Not me," he said with a frown, as if the thought of stopping to eat in the middle of a workday was somehow heretical.
"Starve yourselves if you want to. Just don't ask me to bring anything back."
"Not even a Popsicle?" asked Marshall.
Sully smiled thinly. He was about as short as Napoleon, and radiated a combination of egotism and insecurity that Marshall found especially annoying. He'd been able to put up with it back at the university, where Sully was just one arrogant scientist among many, but up here on the ice--with nowhere to escape--it had grown irksome. Perhaps, he reflected, he should be relieved that their expedition had only a few weeks to play out.
"You look tired," Sully said. "Out walking again last night?"
Marshall nodded.
"You'd better be careful. You might fall into a lava tube and freeze to death."
"All right, Mom. I'll be careful."
"Or run into a polar bear, or something."
"That's all right. I'm starved for some good conversation."
"It's no joke, you refusing to carry a gun and all."
Marshall didn't like the direction this was leading. "Look, if you run into Ang, tell him I've got more samples here for transport back to the lab."
"I'll do that. He'll be thrilled."
Marshall watched the climatologist make his way carefully past them, down the rubble toward the foot of the mountain and their base. He called it "their base," but of course it belonged to the U.S. government: officially known as the Mount Fear Remote Sensing Installation and decommissioned almost fifty years ago, it consisted of a low, gray, sprawling, _institutional-looking structure, festooned with radar domes and other detritus of the cold war. Beyond it lay a frigid landscape of permafrost and lava deposits spewed ages ago from the mountain's guts, gullied and split as if the earth had torn itself apart in geologic agony. In many places, the surface was hidden beneath large snowfields. There were no roads, no other structures, no living things. It was as hostile, as remote, as alien as the moon.
He stretched as he looked out over the forbidding landscape. Even after four weeks on-site, it still seemed hard to believe that anyplace could be so barren. But then the entire scientific expedition had seemed a little unreal from the start. Unreal that a media giant like Terra Prime had picked their grant applications for approval: four scientists from Northern Massachusetts University with nothing in common save an interest in global warming. Unreal that the government had given them clearance to use Fear Base, _admittedly at significant expense and with strict limitations. And unreal that the warming trend itself was occurring with such breathtaking, frightening speed.
He turned away with a sigh. His knees hurt from hours of crouching over the terminal moraine, collecting samples. His fingertips and nose were half frozen. And to add insult to injury, the snow had turned to thin freezing sleet that was now slowly seeping through three layers of clothing and settling into the most intimate crevices of his person. But daylight was brief these days, and their expedition's window was fast closing. He was keenly aware of how little time he had left. There would be plenty of food back in Woburn, Massachusetts, and plenty of time to eat it.
As he turned to retrieve the sample bags, he heard Faraday speak again. "Five years ago, even two, I'd never believe it. Rain."
"It's not rain, Wright. It's sleet."
"Close enough. Rain in the Zone, with winter coming on? Unbelievable."
The "Zone" was a vast stretch of northeastern Alaska, hard against the Arctic Ocean, sandwiched between the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge on one side and the Yukon's Ivvavik National Park on the other. It was a tract so cold and desolate that nobody wanted anything to do with it: temperatures struggled to get above zero only a few months out of the year. Years ago, the government branded it the Federal Wilderness Zone and promptly forgot all about it. There were, Marshall reflected, probably no more than two dozen people in all its two million acres: their own scientific team of five, the base's skeleton crew of four, a small band of Native Americans to the north, and a scattering of backpackers and loners who were too hard-core or eccentric to settle for anything but the most remote. How strange to think there were few people farther north on the planet than their little group.
A sudden, tremendous report, like the crack of a cannon, shook the glacial valley with the violence of an earthquake. The sound echoed across the tundra below them, violating the profound silence, bouncing back and forth like a tennis ball, growing slowly fainter as it receded into endless distance. Above, the face of the glacier had shorn away, tons of ice and snow adding to the frozen rubble lying along its forward edge. Marshall felt his heart lurch uncomfortably in his chest. No matter how many times he heard that sound, its violence always came as a shock.
Faraday pointed toward it. "See? That's exactly what I mean. A valley glacier like the Fear should taper to a nice, thin ice front, with a minimum of meltwater and a healthy percolation zone. But this one is calving like a tidewater glacier. I've been measuring the basal melt--"
"That's Sully's job, not yours."
"--and it's off the scale." Faraday shook his head. "Rain, unprecedented melting--and there are other things happening, too. Like the northern lights the last few nights. You notice them?"
"Of course. A single color--it was spectacular. And unusual."
"Unusual." Faraday repeated the word thoughtfully.
Marshall did not reply. In his experience, every scientific expedition, even one as small as this, had its Cassandra figure. Wright Faraday--with his prodigious learning, his pessimistic outlook on life, his dark theories and outrageous predictions--played the role expertly. Marshall gave the biologist a covert glance. Despite knowing him casually as a university colleague, and now having spent a month almost continually in his presence, he didn't really have a good idea what made the man tick.
Still--Marshall thought as he filled and sealed a fresh bag, recorded the sample's location in a notebook, then measured and photographed the extraction site--Faraday had a point. And that point was one reason he himself was collecting samples at an almost frantic pace. A glacier was a near-perfect place for his kind of research. During its formation, as it accumulated snow, it trapped organic remains: pollen, plant fibers, animal remains. Later, as the glacier retreated, melting slowly away, it gracefully yielded up those secrets once again. This was an ideal gift for a paleoecologist, a treasure trove from the past.
Except there was nothing slow or graceful about this glacier's retreat. It was falling to pieces with alarming speed--and taking its secrets with it.
As if on cue, there was another ear-shattering explosion from the face of the glacier, another shuddering cascade of ice. Marshall glanced toward the sound, feeling a mixture of irritation and impatience. A much larger section of the glacier's face had fallen away this time. With a sigh, he bent toward his specimens, then abruptly swiveled back in the direction of the glacier. Among the fractured ice boulders at its base, he could see that part of the mountain face beneath had been exposed by the calving. He squinted at it for a moment. Then he called over to Faraday.
"You've got the field glasses, don't you?"
"Right here."
Marshall walked toward him. The biologist had pulled the binoculars from a pocket and was holding them out with a heavily gloved hand. Marshall took them, breathed on the eyepieces to warm them, wiped them free of mist, then raised them toward the glacier.
"What is it?" Faraday said, excitement kindling in his voice. "What do you see?"
Marshall licked his lips and stared at what the fallen ice had revealed. "It's a cave," he replied.
2
An hour later, they stood before the icy rubble at the Fear glacier's front face. The freezing rain had stopped, and a weak sun struggled to pierce the gunmetal clouds. Marshall rubbed his arms briskly, trying to warm himself. He looked around at their little group. Sully had returned, bringing with him Ang Chen, the team's graduate student. Except for Penny Barbour, their computer scientist, the entire expedition was now assembled at the terminal moraine.
The cave lay directly ahead, its mouth black against the clear blue of the glacial ice. To Marshall, it looked like the barrel of a monstrous gun. Sully stare... --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
From AudioFile
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
Product details
- ASIN : B001NLKT2Y
- Publisher : Anchor (December 24, 2008)
- Publication date : December 24, 2008
- Language : English
- File size : 2762 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 450 pages
- Lending : Not Enabled
- Best Sellers Rank: #14,945 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #118 in Men's Adventure Fiction (Books)
- #229 in Men's Adventure Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #238 in Fantasy Adventure Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Lincoln Child is the co-author, with Douglas Preston, of such highly-acclaimed thrillers as CROOKED RIVER, OLD BONES, VERSES FOR THE DEAD, CABINET OF CURIOSITIES, and RELIC, the latter two of which were chosen by an NPR poll as among the 100 greatest thrillers ever written. He has also published seven thrillers of his own, most recently the Jeremy Logan books FULL WOLF MOON and THE FORGOTTEN ROOM. 26 of his joint and solo books have become bestsellers, 3 of which debuted at #1 on the New York Times list. He lives in Sarasota, Florida.
Customer reviews
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The author's prose creates an air of mystery, coupled with an almost palpable sense of psychological dread, primal fear, and abject repulsion that typify the best examples of such narratives. While it describes in no uncertain terms details of the murder, mayhem, and terror being inflicted on the novel's characters, it mercifully refrains from the excesses of style that result in shockingly graphic and disgusting imagery. And although the character of Jeremy Logan remains largely secondary in the plot, except for a chapter near the beginning and the finale where he reveals his interpretation of events, it is a worthy addition to the series. Not since the novel "Relic" by Child and Preston have I read such a powerful horror narrative of this kind, set in relatively contemporary times. Although its plot appears to be somewhat inspired by the 1951 film version of "The Thing from Another World", and to a lesser degree by H. P. Lovecraft's "At the Mountains of Madness" and the still earlier Edgar Allan Poe novel "The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket", which started the genre of mystery-horror stories set in the antarctic or arctic ice fields, "Terminal Freeze" is nevertheless a compelling and original tale that I could not stop listening to!
BTW: Scott Brick's masterful performance of the audio version lends a sense of reality to the narrative while riveting the listener's attention throughout.
Top reviews from other countries



In truth, this is an efficient enough page turner. It doesn't demand much of the reader and it does enough to make you want to read on. But in comparison to Relic it's pretty basic as there just doesn't seem to be as much at stake. The creature seems like a really scary sucker but since there is a way to get out of the base and escape the threat never seems that great. The danger only even seems to exist because of the stupidity of some characters.
So, overall, not a bad book, just not a particularly gone one, either.

G. H. Wilson
