(11/18/09) Well, I chose this as "to read" as I plan on reading "The Scarlatti Inheritance" in the near future. Truth be told, however, I have already read two of these enclosed books, and herein are brief reviews of them:
"The Gemini Contenders" is one I actually read about 30+ years ago and recognized I had done so about a third of the way through it. Finished it anyway because I enjoyed it so much. Involves twins on opposite sides of a Nazi-inspired (what else?) pursuit of a supposedly "lost" gospel by Jesus himself, calling into account some presuppositions about him and all sorts of "this is gonna have a massive influence on Christianity and the WHOLE WORLD!!!" folderol. This device was in "The Word" by Irving Wallace" and of course more recently in "The DaVinci Code." No matter, the action and suspense are very good, the relationship between the brothers intriguing, and those dirty old Nazis are everywhere, even in modern day! Very fun read, highly recommended. Would give it a Five Star Review!!!
"The Osterman Weekend" is more of a "Who are our neighbors REALLY?" scenarios, and the plot goes through all sorts of twists and turns and suspicions of this one, then that one, with some (well, not enough, for me) clues as to who's the REAL culprit(s). Might make you take a second look at who those nice people on your cul-de-sac might really be... This was made into a movie, Sam Peckinpah's last, but it got bad reviews, gonna see it sometime anyway. Book was OK, but I think not up to Ludlum's usual quality. Would give it Three Star review.
OK, now on to "The Scarlatti Inheritance" (well, after I finish "The Lost Symbol (yeah, Dan Brown again, can't put 'im down) and "Eureka Man," which is my FIRST pre-publication book I won through Goodreads! A review of that one coming in a couple weeks.
01/28/10 Finished "The Scarlatti Inheritance," a pre-Nazi thriller which, I fear, is mostly talk and only a bit of thrill. Nonetheless, it is a fun romp through the world of the rich (a transformation similar to that in "The Lost Symbol" is part of the fun, but much more overt). I would have given this a "Three Star" review, easy to read, but not up to the standards of some of his other works (see above).
08/12/10 Finished "The Matlock Paper," my second-favorite in this collection. A college professor, James Matlock, is recruited by the Justice Department to infiltrate and find out who's behind drug deals on a Connecticut campus. WELL, the shootings and torture start almost immediately and the good/bad guys are shifting almost in every chapter, and this poor sap gets pursued by good and bad alike and the layers of depravity get uncovered almost as fast, and I couldn't put this dang thing down! Another fun "The groves of Academe hide pretty nasty stuff" romp. This was published in 1973, so some of what we'd see as anachronisms are pretty fun: Use of pay phones to conceal one's whereabouts; the militant Black campus organizations amidst general student unrest; and, my personal favorite, when talking about recruitment of college girls for a prostitution ring, one character exclaims,"It's the Age of Aquarius! Nobody has to pay for sex!" I laughed out loud, but then I'm old enough to remember all that stuff.