2 member(s) found this review helpful.
I really liked this book from the MAN's point of view. Very refreshing and good.
Former marine diver Beck Easton is looking forward to a slow, hot summer running his small dive shop. His specialty is cave diving - a sport of measured risks. But when Jennifer Cassidy steps into his life, Beck knows that risks have just multiplied.
Jennifer Casidy, a university graduate assistant, loves the thrill of research and the hunt for elusive facts. Hired for a summer research project, she has stumbled onto a mystery, a valuable secret hidden at the bottom of a Florida spring by a Civil War widow. Excited by the challenge, Jennifer shows up at Beck Easton's dive shop determined to uncover the truth...no matter what it takes.
Intrigued, Beck agrees to help. In a dive into the caves of Twin Springs, he uncovers a 140 year old clue to a mystery that pre-dates the Civil War. Waht Beck doesn't know is that he is put himself - and Jennifer - on a dangerous path between truth and deception, a plath where they must watch their every step.
When Jennifer's life is threatened, Beck begins to wonder if they've uncovered a secret worth dying for...
Book Club Servant Leader
Finding Hope Through Fiction
www.psalm516.blogspot.com
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Great adventure. It took a couple of turns toward the end that I wasn't expecting. The cover of this book must be mentioned...extemely cool.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Despite a few flaws, this well-paced romantic adventure yarn about a lost ship full of gold will please history buffs who like faith fiction. Morrisey (Yucatan Deep) opens with an intriguing prologue in which a Confederate family attempts to hide a mysterious package deep in the heart of Florida's Twin Springs—with tragic results. One hundred and forty years later, University of Michigan graduate student Jennifer Cassidy ("cute as the proverbial button") is hot on the trail of the secret. Helping her is hunky widower Beck Easton, a seemingly flawless, teetotaling Christian shipwreck diver who has "biceps like firm bread loaves" and is equally at home flying small aircraft or whipping up gourmet spinach pasta. If what they discover pans out, history will be rewritten and both will become rich beyond their wildest dreams. But they have to outwit the bad guys first. Morrisey's knowledge of diving adds colorful and precise details to the underwater scenes, and the plot offers plenty of surprises. However, Morrisey relies on tired novelist tricks (characters described as they look into a mirror) and the occasional humor falls flat, as when Jennifer makes a stab at a pun: "Beck Easton seemed to have new depths at every turn." Although readers may find themselves doubting the choice Beck and Jennifer make at the conclusion, they will still enjoy the journey.
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