Apparently, hunting prehistoric giant sharks can save a marriage. This is the adorable take-away from Steve Alten’s ridiculously pulpy novel “The Trench”, which is the second book in his strangely addictive MEG series. (The first book is now a major motion picture starring Jason Statham.)
I’m not sure why I love these books so much, although I’m thinking part of the reason is because Alten is a much smarter writer than he lets on. He tells a damn good fish story, with plenty of action and sea-faring adventure, but he also interjects enough fascinating facts about marine biology and paleobiology to sound legitimate.
In “The Trench”, several years have passed since the events of “MEG”: Jonas Taylor is now married to Terry Tanaka. The expensive maritime institute facility built specifically to hold Angel, the captured megaladon, needs serious maintenance work, more than the institute’s budget allows. A billionaire named Benedict Singer makes a generous proposal to help save the facility. Unfortunately, it would entail splitting up Jonas and Terry for several weeks as Terry takes on a position of consultant for an underwater expedition to the Mariana Trench, led by Singer.
The Taylors aren’t doing so well. Since Terry’s miscarriage, Jonas and Terry have felt themselves drifting. Jonas buries himself in work, feeling angry and guilty all the time. Terry struggles with the uncomfortable thoughts that Jonas is partly to blame for the miscarriage, because it was the stress of worrying about her husband’s state of mind that contributed to losing the baby. Perhaps, she thinks, a period of time apart may be helpful.
Unbeknownst to everyone, however, Singer is actually an evil Bond villain bent on world domination. He’s on a hunt for a rare element that can only be found in the Trench (of course). He’ll stop at nothing to get it, including sacrificing his entire crew of Russian mercenaries and kidnapped scientists, as well as Terry, to a bevy of underwater dangers.
Meanwhile, in spectacular disaster movie pyrotechnics, Angel breaks out of her confines, killing many innocent bystanders along the way. Like a giant salmon, she’s heading back to the Trench to spawn.
It’s up to Jonas, and his wise-cracking sidekick Mac, to save his wife, his marriage, and the world. Preferably in that order.
What can I say? This book is friggin’ awesome...