Corsair by Clive Cussler with Jack Du Brul (Contains Affiliate Link)
For five novels, Clive Cussler has brought readers into the world of the Oregon,
a seemingly dilapidated ship packed with sophisticated equipment, and
captained by the rakish, one-legged Juan Cabrillo. And now the Oregon and its crew face their biggest challenge yet.
Corsairs are pirates, and pirates come in many different varieties.
There are the pirates who fought off the Barbary Coast in the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the contemporary pirates who
infest the waters of Africa and Asia, and the pirates . . . who look
like something else.
When the U.S. secretary of state’s plane
crashes while bringing her to a summit meeting in Libya, the CIA,
distrusting the Libyans, hire Juan Cabrillo to search for her, and their
misgivings are well founded. The crew locates the plane, but the
secretary of state has vanished. It turns out Libya’s new foreign
minister has other plans for the conference, plans that Cabrillo cannot
let happen. But what does it all have to do with a two- hundred-
year-old naval battle and the centuries-old Islamic scrolls that the
Libyans seem so determined to find? The answers will lead him full
circle into history, and into another pitched battle on the sea, this
time against Islamic terrorists, and with the fate of nations resting on
its outcome.
“Readers will burn up the pages following the
blazing action and daring exploits of these men and women and their
amazing machines,” writes Publishers Weekly of the Oregon Files series. And they’ll do it once again, with Corsair. (From Amazon.com product listing.)
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