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Icefire #2

Freefall

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U.S. Navy Captain Mitch Webber, oceanographer Cory Rey, and Air Force Major Wilhemina Bailey are reunited as they uncover dark secrets about the past and the death of a Russian cosmonaut during the epic struggle between the U.S. and the Soviet Union to be the first to land on the moon. Original.

576 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published March 1, 2005

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Judith Reeves-Stevens

46 books99 followers

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
294 reviews2 followers
October 23, 2017
Years after saving the world from the Icefire tsunami, Mitch Webber and Cory Rey find themselves working together again. Cory is on the International Space Station to retrieve lunar samples for her employer. There are powers that don't want those samples returned and an act of sabotage results in the destruction of a space shuttle and damage to the ISS. Only Rey and a Russian cosmonaut live to return to Earth.
Mitch is enticed to work for the U.S. Space Force, a clandestine branch of the Air Force. They are working to destroy evidence on the moon of a Russian manned landing around the same time as the Apollo 11 landing, possibly before Apollo 11 landed.
Add to the mix a Chinese effort to launch a manned lunar landing from a covert space station and the history of the race for the moon could be dramatically altered.
Mitch not only flies in space but even makes it to the moon.
This is a great novel and well worth reading.
Profile Image for Eric.
36 reviews4 followers
October 2, 2023
This was a fun, albeit somewhat odd sequel of a book! The first entry was a wild homage to the disaster films, similar to Roland Emmerich. After that novel’s conclusion, there didn’t seem much room for a sequel, but I was surprised that Reeves-Stevens’ pulled it off!


I enjoyed my time reading this one, but was frustrated with the split of our two protagonists, because it doesn’t seem consistent with how we previously left them. Also, the novel is somewhat misleading in my opinion, as you’re lead to believe more action/events will take place near or on the moon. Instead the novel spends a considerable amount of time with the initial ISS disaster, leaving much of the lunar climax towards the end, with not nearly as many pages dedicated towards it.

The overall result is a fun, if somewhat oddly paced novel that is a perfectly enjoyable read!
2 reviews
December 12, 2017
Read this when I was a teenager and loved it! It was very thought provoking for me at the time, and I've always remembered it.
Profile Image for Jennie Leigh.
Author 2 books7 followers
August 1, 2009
I loved the first book, Icefire. So I was very excited to learn that there would be a sequel. I found myself sadly disappointed with this book, however. It barely kept my interest, which is saying something because I'm an avid reader and will read almost anything if I'm bored enough. Perhaps I just looked forward to it too much. Either way, is was a let down.
Profile Image for Janice.
803 reviews
July 9, 2010
Good conspiracy theory story about the Air Force secretly getting part of NASA's funding to start a U.S. Space Force, with a love story on the side.
260 reviews2 followers
March 14, 2011
Fun Book Sci-fi Secret Moon base conspiracy.

33 reviews
February 6, 2013
Absolutely improbable from a historical standpoint. Categorically ludicrous scientifically. But a heckuva fun read nonetheless.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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