Flood Tide (Dirk Pitt, No. 14)

by Clive Cussler

2009

Status

Available

Publication

Pocket Star (2009), 688 pages

Description

Following the runaway success of his first nonfiction book, "The Sea Hunters," Clive Cussler returns with his legendary fictional hero Dirk Pitt(R) -- in a masterfully crafted tale of villainy on the high seas and the Mississippi River that can only enhance his status as the grand master of adventure fiction. The coin of the realm for the wealthy, insatiably greedy Chinese smuggler who is Dirk Pitt's adversary in "Flood Tide" is human lives: much of his vast fortune has been made smuggling Chinese immigrants into countries around the globe, including the United States. Tracking the smuggler's nefarious activities leads Pitt from Washington State to Louisiana, where his quarry is mysteriously constructing a huge shipping port in the middle of nowhere. Why has he chosen this unlikely location? The trail then leads to the race to find the site of the mysterious sinking of the ship that Chiang Kai-shek filled with treasure when he fled China in 1949, including the legendary boxes containing the bones of Peking Man that had vanished at the beginning of World War I. As Pitt prepares for a final dramatic showdown, he is faced with t… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Ste100
Dumb, blow-uppy summer movie action in the form of a 500 page adventure novel. I'd read a couple from the author, but no more.
LibraryThing member SonicQuack
Cussler has produced some preposterous storylines in the Dirk Pitt series and thankfully Flood Tide is not one of them. Dirk remains as indestructible as ever, this time up against a chinese megalomaniac whose plans are indeed very crafty. The well thought out plot continues to escalate until its
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grand finale and provides plenty of thrills and spills, a few unlikely coincidences, a little romance, a few villains and lots of spent ammo. A little wordy in places, Flood Tide for the most part is a very compentent action thriller and should keep Cussler fans and new readers happy until the end.
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LibraryThing member tuffsme
Even though the Dirk Pitt series is somewhat predictable, they still make for a very captivating read. The hero's humility makes him and his group of companions loveable and easy to root for. You might already know that the hero will always win, but Cussler does a great job of allowing his
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characters to make the most human of mistakes. Highly recommended.
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LibraryThing member FiberBabble
As always, Dirk Pitt does not fail to entertain me. For readers familiar with both Dirk Pitt AND Juan Cabrillo, this is where they first meet. The only down-side here is that Cabrillo is described as a Mexican American and the reader voices him as something resembling the Frito Bandito.

This
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abridgement (4.5 hours) is done well - there aren't any glaring jumps in action or deduction. If not for reading "abridged" on the box, I doubt that I would have realized it.
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LibraryThing member kimmy0ne
A great read
LibraryThing member True54Blue
This novel should be required reading for those seeking to understand the current (2018) situation between the United States and China. Perhaps Trump read it and gained much from Cussler's take on the situation. I wouldn't call the book racist because Pitt's love interest is a Chinese-American but
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it certainly is xenophobic as the main characters again and again blame China for America's immigration woes. They go as far as claiming that China is deliberately smuggling her people abroad in order to reduce the domestic population. This was fearmongering at the time and laughable now that China has discovered she needs all the births she can encourage. Other than these cautions the book is just a lot of running around the world proving how great Pitt is. A three for action.
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LibraryThing member mattries37315
A ship goes down in unknown waters leaving only two survivors that know where a vast amount of Chinese heritage is located, a ship that a human trafficking Chinese businessman would do anything to find. Flood Tide is the fourteenth book of Clive Cussler’s Dirk Pitt with the titular character
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attempting to stop a human trafficking ring to the U.S. and preventing a massive economic and human disaster in Louisiana.

A ship taken by the retreating Nationalist government is loaded the national treasures of China before Mao’s Communists can get them in 1948, but before it reaches it’s destination it sinks in a violent storm with only the ship’s engineer and his girlfriend surviving on a freezing shore. In 2000 Dirk Pitt is vacationing and recovering from his injuries in Australia at Orion Lake when he realizes the cabin he borrowed has been search by the security of a Chinese businessman’s estate at the other end of the lake. Intrigued Pitt investigates only to find the mansion is a holding prison for illegal Chinese immigrants while the bottom of the lake is littered with dead bodies. Pitt saves new victims from drowning including an undercover INS agent and wrecks to the estate’s docking area before escaping down the Orion River to the Pacific from the security force. The INS raid the estate and the businessman Qin Shang begins damage control, including sending feelers to the White House and the President who he has given money to for his reelection campaign. Pitt teams up with Al Giordino to investigate a cruise ship in Hong Kong that Shang had bought and was refitting believing it’s to continue his illegal human trafficking ring, but find it empty except for automated guidance equipment that then navigates the ship across the Pacific without a crew. The pair return to the U.S. and Pitt along with the INS agent survive a car chase against Shang’s henchmen, but NUMA and the INS have a spat leading to them not working together anymore. Pitt and Giordino head to the Louisiana to investigate Shang’s shipping port that is in the middle of no where from the Mississippi when the duo figure out how his human trafficking network works in the area and again save the INS agent that Pitt keeps running into. Shang’s automated cruise ship arrives on the Mississippi River, but Pitt figured out Shang’s plan to redirect the flow of the Mississippi bypassing New Orleans and going to his out-of-the way port by blowing a levee and scuttling the cruise ship across the river. Pitt and Giordino takeover the ship and guide it into the levee’s breech to prevent a massive disaster. Shang flees to China where the Communist government will protect him while as there is battle in the U.S. between those he bribed against those who want him charged with terrorism. After learning everything to know about Shang including his search for the ship carrying his nation’s treasures, Pitt and NUMA discover the location of the wreck in Lake Michigan after talking with the survivor of the ship and his wife. NUMA, the Navy, and a Canadian salvage vessel recover everything before they leak the location into Shang’s channels. His massive ego leads Shang to arrive in Canada to border his own salvage vessel and goes down first only to find the ship empty with Pitt and Giordino springing a trap that send Shang to the bottom to die like all those at the bottom of Orion Lake. Admiral Sandecker and the head of the INS threaten the President to keep their own jobs with his own political future in the balance.

Having previously listened to the audiobook edition, I had completely forgotten about the Chinese treasure ship or Shang bribing of U.S. politicians but do remember the human trafficking and diverting the Mississippi plot points. That was because the human trafficking and Mississippi diversion plots were the good parts of the book while the other two were forgettable. Pitt comes off as superhuman given what he went through in Shock Wave while the INS agent Julia Marie Lee could have been a good character if not for becoming a multiple time damsel-in-distress character. Qin Shang could have been an interesting antagonist if not for some the trope material that Cussler saddled him especially at the end of the book. In fact, Cussler’s politics are heavy handed throughout the book and his “not-Clinton” but totally Clinton President were a little too much for my tastes.

Shock Wave is a okay book at best and felt a like downgrade in quality from Clive Cussler’s previous installments of his bestselling series. While not as bad as some of the early books in the series, this book was a disappointment given the good elements that were undermined by the bad.
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LibraryThing member buffalogr
At 19+ hours, it's a very long book that seems like it will never end; however entertaining. The bad guy, a Chinese megalomaniac capitalist, smuggles Chinese into the USA and searches for a ship containing Chinese historical treasures. Dirk and Al team up with Juan Cabrillo for a time. Dirk's love
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interest is an INS agent--Chinese American. Cussler also appears as an old guy in Louisiana. Fun read, many plots on a single theme--illegal immigration.
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LibraryThing member JPodlaski
Once again, Clive Cussler has written a story that kept me up late in the night to read through the many twists, turns, and obstacles facing Dirk Pitt and Giordino. The story begins with Dirk traveling to a remote cabin in the Washington wilds for a well-deserved healing vacation on the lake.
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Unfortunately, he suspects evil doings at a property across the lake and decides to investigate. What he finds turns his stomach and makes him want to find whoever is responsible and bring them to justice.

The evil-doer is Qin Zhang, a Chinese billionaire, whose company is suspected of illegally transporting thousands of Chinese nationals into the US. Dirk and NUMA are tasked with putting an end to this enterprise. Readers also discover that the billionaire is obsessed with the disappearance of a luxury liner that sunk in 1949, its holds, and passenger rooms filled with stolen Chinese artifacts that he wants for himself; he's been looking for the wreckage most of his life. The author also includes Juan Cabrillo and his Oregon vessel in this storyline to help Dirk and Giordino complete a task in Hong Kong.

The wreckage is eventually located and everyone gets what he deserves.

FLOOD TIDE is a thrilling adventure mystery that will be hard to put down. I highly recommend it and already purchased the next book in the series.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1997-09

Physical description

688 p.; 4.13 inches

ISBN

1439148112 / 9781439148112

Barcode

1601334

Other editions

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