The Eldridge Conspiracy Stephen Ames Berry Books
Download As PDF : The Eldridge Conspiracy Stephen Ames Berry Books
1943 The destroyer USS Eldridge vanishes during the Philadelphia Experiment. The ship invisibility project ends. Nuremberg, 1946 Nazi death camp doctor Martin von Kemnitz is hanged. The Pentagon, 1999 A dying hand gifts Angie Milano and Jim Munroe with the deadly legacy that is the Eldridge roster, the long-lost crew list of the Philadelphia Experiment. The two are soon on the run from the vicious killers sent for it. Without the roster, Project Telemachus, the perversion of a wondrous meld of genetics and physics, will fail. And mankind may survive. 5 Star Reviews for The Eldridge Conspiracy “Berry does an amazing job of presenting a raft of characters, every last one of which is vivid, real, likable or loathsome, and keeps all of their time-lines, actions, and interactions seamlessly melded—we never get confused. At the risking of stooping to prosaic usage This is a really, really, really good read. If you're looking for a well-crafted page turner to devour… I recommend this one. My advice Buy this book. It's great.” Ken Korczak ( US) “Absolutely LOVED this book and could NOT put it down! … Amazing. Uber~Fantastique! Not only does the story pull you in, you think, ‘What if this actually had happened.’” Amber Norrgard ( US) “Stephen has done it again in this intense novel that you won’t be able to put down. You know it’s coming to the end and you don’t want it to.” Jeremy Dobe ( US) “I read it in two sittings… I just could not put it down… a very fast paced thriller with some really likeable characters. If you have ever been fascinated by tales of the Philadelphia Experiment and/or what could happen if the wrong people were allowed to mess around with genetics, then I think you will like this. It's a real page turner, and brilliant value for money. Recommended. Buy it and enjoy. Ann Tocher ( UK)
The Eldridge Conspiracy Stephen Ames Berry Books
I got this book when it was offered free for the Kindle a few days ago. I have become a little cautious of the "free books" because so many of them are so poorly written and edited. I'm happy to be able to say that this book is actually worth buying.I like mysteries and science fiction and this book is a nice combination of both. I have always been interested in the story of the naval ship Eldridge and the mystery of "did they or did they not" use it for dangerous experiments during WWII. This book is a well plotted fiction of what might have happened in the lives of the survivors and their offspring after the experiment ended.
The main character is a likable government computer nerd who stumbles across a secretly funded government program that is tracking down, experimenting on, and killing the children and grand children of the survivors of the Eldridge. They are also killing anyone who learns about their activities. Our hero falls in love with one of the people they are searching for, and in the process of helping her discovers that his daughter, who he thought had died years ago, is also involved in the nasty program.
Fortunately for us, the hero has friends in the right places and with their help he may be able to prevent the deaths of the ones he loves. There are plot twists, mystery, action, and romance to keep the story going, as well as a dash of physics, string theory, and time travel to make it all seem plausible. It was a very enjoyable read.
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The Eldridge Conspiracy Stephen Ames Berry Books Reviews
This book grabs you attention and holds it with plenty of plot twists along the way. It's and interesting take on the consequences of the Eldridge experiment. I especially liked that the characters weren't black and white . The good guys had faults and the bad guys had at least a reason that made sense to them.
I love action that just keeps you romping right along, and this conspiracy novel is at the top of it's game. Good character development, plenty of science and physics to keep you up at night wondering "what if", as well as dirty characters that make you believe that the Alphabet agencies are just as crooked as you believe. Don't miss this one!
Thought it was pretty good. The Eldridge story is on of my all time favorites--this is why I started on this book. Found it a little distracting when there were no quotes at the end of a character speaking in many places. I am no grammar expert, but it didn't seem right. And in the epilogue... who is Cassandra? I must have glossed over that detail somewhere in the main part of the book.
I just now finished this book and I must say I really enjoyed it. Enough of the Philedphia experiment in it, some extra information and then the hints of the future and what happened. If you like the thought and wonder of "what if" from the Philedelphia experiment, you'll really enjoy this book and how it's built on.
The portion of past, that ties to the future makes the present "interesting" to say the least.
Combines the best aspects of bureaucratic intrigue, murder mystery, and scientific prediction. Unfortunately, there seem to be an average of 1.3 grammatical and / or spelling errors per page. For a book of 279 pages, that is a lot. Nevertheless the story and outcome are well worth the detraction.
I read the Eldridge Conspiracy over the weekend. It was a great read. The characters were well developed and enjoyable. The science fiction was written well enough that you believe the sequence could actually happen. I had other work to do this weekend but spent most of my time reading. It was that good. The only problem was the frequent grammar and spelling errors. I'm going to give it five stars for the story but it really deserves four for the editing.
The premise behind this story is that during World War II, the US, Germany and Japan tried to find means of hiding ships from radar, and in each case the ship "disappeared", but the crew emerged with genetic alteration. The children of these crewmen, and in particular their children, inherited paranormal abilities.
The story starts with the compiler of a roster of the descendants being killed. Moreover, the data had been tampered with so it could not be recompiled. The problem is that Schmidla, an ex-German experimenter in eugenics, is trying to create a new species, a "superman", but all his experiments have achieved so far is to kill these subjects. Schmidla, and various parts of the US government, want the list to get the remaining descendants, while the main protagonist, Jim Beauchamp, becomes involved in trying to protect those on the list. The subsequent "race to descendants" is told in a fast-moving well-written tale, and as it becomes told, we become aware of just what some of these paranormal abilities are. The beginning and the development of the story are exciting, the writing is crisp and I am prepared to forgive the grammatical/editing slips, which are tolerably frequent. Up to here, five stars.
Unfortunately, the conclusion falls down. Without giving away too many details, it has plot clichés, fairly standard action, much of which occurs "in the background" so we do not see it, and it is ridden with logical inconsistencies. It appears that the author has created a magnificent build-up, but then does not know what to do with it. Worse, there are one or two points that seem important to me as a reader that ended up being unclear (and unfortunately I cannot list these without giving away the plot) so I did not really know what the ending was in fine detail. It is still a good read, but for me, the end was enough of a letdown that it left me feeling flat.
Ian Miller, author of Troubles
I got this book when it was offered free for the a few days ago. I have become a little cautious of the "free books" because so many of them are so poorly written and edited. I'm happy to be able to say that this book is actually worth buying.
I like mysteries and science fiction and this book is a nice combination of both. I have always been interested in the story of the naval ship Eldridge and the mystery of "did they or did they not" use it for dangerous experiments during WWII. This book is a well plotted fiction of what might have happened in the lives of the survivors and their offspring after the experiment ended.
The main character is a likable government computer nerd who stumbles across a secretly funded government program that is tracking down, experimenting on, and killing the children and grand children of the survivors of the Eldridge. They are also killing anyone who learns about their activities. Our hero falls in love with one of the people they are searching for, and in the process of helping her discovers that his daughter, who he thought had died years ago, is also involved in the nasty program.
Fortunately for us, the hero has friends in the right places and with their help he may be able to prevent the deaths of the ones he loves. There are plot twists, mystery, action, and romance to keep the story going, as well as a dash of physics, string theory, and time travel to make it all seem plausible. It was a very enjoyable read.
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