I was pleased to find Jack B. Du Brul's main character in his action thriller is a geologist, as I am one too. I was intrigued that his novel could have a bit of sci-fi, which would be a genre mix that would appeal to me. But I was astonished that VULCAN'S FORGE would have so many features of realism. Du Brul's writing keeps you on your toes with a spiderweb of various plots that all get resolved in their own time.
The story opens in the summer of 1954 with Captain Linc, commanding the "Grandam Phoenix," an ore ship 200 miles off the coast of Hawaii. Linc is instructed to wreck the ship so his company can collect insurance. When he does, his crew is murdered by men on a "rescue ship," just when an underwater atomic bomb goes off.
About 40 years later, we are taken to the Oval Office, where we find Du Brul's President of the United States is advised a NOAA ship called the "Ocean Seeker" is lost 200 miles north of Hawaii, (and near the point where the "Phoenix" was lost).
Meanwhile, we are introduced to Philip Mercer, (perhaps a play on the word "mercenary?"), a geologist with commando experience in Iraq. He gets a message from someone claiming to be Jack Talbot, and old friend he met in Alaska. The message says Talbot's daughter Tish, is in danger and Mercer finds her in a hospital where there are indeed men trying to kill her. He gets her out and finds men trying to kill him in a car chase in Washington D.C. and a shootout in a subway.
Mercer gives Tish refuge in his apartment while he tries to learn what all is going on.
He soon learns that Tish is being hunted because she was aboard the "Ocean Seeker" that went down near the "Phoenix" site. The site is of interest to an eccentric business mogol named Takahiro Ohnishi a Hawaii resident with an obsession with his Japanese heritage.
Ohnishi feels he has more in common with all ethnic Japanese than American citizens and the people of Hawaii should not have to bear the consequences of America's financial blunders. And it is clear he has an interest in secession where Hawaii could be an independent nation run by himself via his puppet mayor of Honolulu, David Takamora. With money and political power, Ohnishi is able to control Hawaiian society by inducing riots and social upheaval to resist federal control.
The only person who stands in Ohnishi's way is Jill Tzu, a determined journalist, who refuses to cooperate with his increasingly facist propaganda machine. She disappears.
The "Phoenix" wreck site is also of interest to Colonel Ivan Kerikov, a KGB veteran who took part in an old Soviet project called Vulcan's Forge, after a newly discovered alloy was formed from the Bikini bomb test in 1946. The plan was to use a nuclear bomb at a volcanic site north of the Hawaiian islands, sink the "Phoenix" and make this new alloy called "bikinium."
Mercer learns this was done through a KGB front organization called Ocean Front and Cargo, with headquarters in New York and the Soviets were using Ohnishi to disrupt American interests. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Kerikov sees that Vulcan's Forge is no longer needed to undermine American interests but it could still be used to make himself wealthy and prosperous.
The President of the United States, frustrated by the possibility of civil war, which could bring a lot of bloodshed to Hawaii, tends to believe that Mercer is doing a better job of investigating all of this than his cabinet, the CIA or the FBI, who tend to get in one another's way.
Towards the end Mercer goes on a commando raid to Hawaii, where he is helped by a double cross on Ohnishi's side and we are given a great final suprise at the end of the novel.
Since I am often interested in action-adventure drama, I found VULCAN'S FORGE to be a page turner. I did find some of the killing scenes and forced sex on a young girl a bit harsh but I realize they are presented in the context of showing Ohnishi's cruelty.
All and all I consider VULCAN'S FORGE a great novel and it leaves the reader left with food for thought on how men who claim to be liberators can by tyrants as well.