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Primordia #2

Return to the Lost World

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It was true – it was all true – and we were never meant to be there.

In December 2018, Ben Cartwright, former Special Forces soldier, and a team of naive explorers, followed the clues left by his ancestor to a hidden plateau in the middle of the Amazon jungle. It was said that once every 10 years, a secret pathway was revealed to a world long since gone.

They went, and what they found was a place of wonders and of horrors. Only Ben and his childhood love, Emma, survived. But when the doorway to the hidden world closed, Ben was trapped on the wrong side.

Now, Emma has waited 10 long years for the doorway to open again. This time she’d be ready. This time she had everything she needed to go back to that hellish place and survive. All she needed was for Ben to be alive when she got there.

PRIMORDIA II explores a prehistoric world and travels over mountains, through swamps, strange jungles, and dives below a primordial ocean.

249 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 14, 2018

632 people are currently reading
430 people want to read

About the author

Greig Beck

46 books1,156 followers
Hi GoodReaders, I’m an Australian author residing in Sydney with my wife, son and a mad Golden Retriever named Jessie. My novels are now available globally, also in Large Print and now in full AUDIO format.

I grew up spending my days surfing at Bondi Beach before entering a career in Information technology which took me around the world. After completing an MBA, i was appointed both an Australasian director of a multinational software company, and tasked with setting up the USA arm of the organisation.

Today, I spend most of my time writing... with plenty left over for surfing.

More information about me and my works can be found at either www.greigbeck.com, or join me on FaceBook (Greig Beck Author).

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 116 reviews
Profile Image for Tracy  P. .
1,164 reviews12 followers
August 24, 2019
Mr.Beck's books can always be counted on to deliver action and graphics at heightened levels like no other. Head spinning.
Excellent plot, character development and I always learn a lot of fascinating scientific, historical information which allows me to appreciate the storyline that much more.
The fact I actually have to pause a book from time to time to catch my breath and chill out from all the excitement is testament to Greig Beck's talents and genius.
Profile Image for Cam.
1,217 reviews2 followers
May 19, 2019
Really enjoyed this book.... This book leaves off after Emma returns to the present day and gearing up to go back to Primordia to get Ben. Thrilling adventure book with a Jurassic appeal.
Profile Image for Paul (Life In The Slow Lane).
880 reviews69 followers
November 10, 2022
What the dinosaur

Not many authors do "man meets dinosaur" as well as Greig Beck. This is no exception. I was hoping that "Titanoboa" wasn't the main protagonist this time. To his credit, Greig does introduce a lot of other toothy prehistoric characters, and many of them only recently discovered: Giganotosaurus for instance? Also there were the giant, blood-sucking earthworms (bloodworm's predecessors) that latch onto you from below; well they were just plain creepy. As for Titanoboa; well I just wish it came to the same ending as the shark in Jaws (the movie).

The action is plenty. There's LOTS of dinosaurs. The writing is good. The typos are few (well I only found one). The characters are likeable or dislikable, and the plot, while predictable, is still pretty good. What's not to like?
Profile Image for chucklesthescot.
3,000 reviews134 followers
May 4, 2019
This blurb and review contain spoilers from book one in the series.

Emma survived the deadly trip to the Lost World, barely escaping before the plateau vanished for another ten years, taking Ben with it. She knows she has ten years to prepare another expedition and persuade Ben's former military buddies to help her launch a rescue mission to bring him home. As she connects with old contacts and recruits new people, she fears that Ben may already be dead and feels guilty that despite her warnings, nobody on her new team believes what they are about to witness with their own eyes. She also has to deal with the journalist who has forced her way on to the expedition, trying to prove that Emma was the one who killed Ben and is just staging the rescue as a cover up.

Ben is still alive. He has had to use his military skills and what he learned from his first few days on the plateau to survive, moving around a whole new dinosaur land below it. He has spent time by the sea and had encounters with new deadly creatures, counting the days until the comet arrives again. As the final few days come, Ben finds that life becomes even more dangerous as he makes his way back, and there is the added fear that if Emma doesn't come for him, he will be living with the dinosaurs forever-or at least until they kill him.

There are new characters on the expedition. Ben's former military friends have agreed to help Emma so we are introduced to Drake, Fergus, Ajax and Brocke. There is the nasty journalist Camilla and her photographer Juan, who do prove their worth by getting rid of some of the red tape that is crippling Emma as the expedition prepares to leave. She has also persuaded paleontologist brother and sister Andy and Helen as experts to guide them. The group decide to follow the secret river to the plateau on a balloon to save time, with the plan of dropping down onto the plateau as soon as it appears but of course things start to go wrong when Emma hasn't taken into account the flying menace around her that takes an interests in the balloon and the occupents of it, sending them crashlanding into the lake.

There again are lots of dinosaurs to enjoy on the trip. We have the brilliant pterosaurs, who were always favourites of mine as a kid and the scary mososaur in the lake that you really want to stay the heck away from! There are lots of big deadly titanoboas as well which give a lot of interesting and tense action scenes, and the big deadly carnivore dinosaurs that we met in the first book. As much as I love dinosaurs, I certainly wouldn't want to be on this particular adventure. There is just so much danger around every corner in this book and it does get into the story quicker than the first book. While we see Emma prepare for the trip, we switch back to see how Ben is coping with the dinosaurs and finding out some of what he has had to deal with as he waited for the comet to return.

This was a good sequel with plenty of creatures to scare the reader and a greater focus on the snakes than we saw in the first book. I enjoyed the typical tension, action and danger that is normal for a creature feature book.
Profile Image for Elaine.
682 reviews57 followers
February 14, 2019
Greig Beck is fast becoming a favourite of mine, but this book, just seemed like a retelling of the first. I did enjoy it, it had dinosaurs after all. I'm hoping book 3 will expand a little more on the actual world and dinosaurs.
Profile Image for ❀ Crystal ✿ -  PEACE ☮ LOVE ♥ BOOKS .
2,533 reviews310 followers
July 27, 2023
10 years is a long time to be stuck in the primordial past. Now that ten years have gone by, Emma is determined to bring her lost love Ben home. Chances of him being alive are slim but she's determined to retrieve him just as much as he is determined to live. Luckily Ben is a trained special forces solider and it's these skills that keep him alive. The 'portal' through time only lasts hours but Emma has spent the last ten years training for this very thing. She even has the bright idea to convince Ben's old unit to come along, she could really use the extra fire power that's for sure. The first third of the book is not super exciting but once they arrive back in time shit doesn't take long to hit the fan. Once the action begins it does not let up until the bitter end. Note, it is definitely necessary to read book one for this book to make sense. It's full of action, nail biting fear and some absolutely bat shit crazy people who take on an endeavor like this!
Profile Image for Monica Mac.
1,690 reviews41 followers
August 13, 2018
After I finished reading Primordia #1, I couldn't wait until a sequel came out to it, I really needed to KNOW what happened to Ben! And now I do :)

This was quite a short book but it takes care of a lot of the questions I had after finishing the first book. Emma takes off to Venezuela with some special forces soldiers and some others she hadn't planned on taking along and plans it just right to coincide with the once-every-decade appearance of the Primordia comet.

I guess you will have to read the book to see what happens next, but I can tell you that it is another really good Greig Beck adventure and your heart will be in your mouth many times.

Great read! 4.5 stars.
Profile Image for Carisa Burns.
207 reviews17 followers
April 8, 2021
Excellent

Great follow up to the first. I wasn't disappointed. I wish we met up with Greg earlier in the book but I liked the new characters too.
Profile Image for Christina Rothfusz.
970 reviews27 followers
July 6, 2021
I just so love these adventure stories! Far, far more than I expected to.

The second novel starts about 8 years after the end of the first one. Primordia is on it's way again ... Emma knows she has to be ready to get back and find Ben. She set's out to recruit the best cru and equip them with everything they did not have the last time.

Of course, everything goes wrong. People rarely behave the way you expect them to in situations under severe pressure and this is no different. And one of their number is adamant to stay behind, this is exactly the world he's dreamed of and spend half he's life studying, massive snake or not!

Fast paced, well written and a perfect 2nd book in the series.

My husband has warned me though that I (or he more likely) cannot spend a 3rd night in a row finishing a book and not sleeping enough, so I may have to wait for a few days before starting the 3rd one .... or not!
15 reviews
May 31, 2023
Much bettet than the first. Also has a kaiju-esque fight that has me begging me for a film
Profile Image for Tyler.
307 reviews2 followers
August 5, 2025
Titanboa is so much more effective than any anaconda.

4.4 🌟
162 reviews3 followers
May 16, 2018
I loved primordia and primordia 11.

Great and well written stories. Both kept me riveted to my seat and ful!h engaged in the action. What an interesting concept to actually find oneself in the past and learning to survive against all odds.
Profile Image for Allison.
17 reviews11 followers
August 28, 2018
Like Primordia, this sequel grabbed me from the start and I couldn't put it down. Great story and characters, with tons of non-stop action. Kept me on the edge of my seat, with heart-pounding fun!
Profile Image for Karl.
111 reviews
July 13, 2018
In my review of Primordia: In Search of the Lost World, I said the book felt largely as setup for the sequel. And having now read the sequel, I can say that, yes, it is a setup for the sequel. While the first book had trouble getting started, spending almost half the book setting up the plot we all came for, this one gets started significantly faster, cutting between Ben Cartwright's struggle to survive 100 million years ago and Emma Wilson planning his rescue. We're dropped into the action significantly faster this way and with Ben's situation there's a interest in finding out how he managed to survive, to hear little stories of his adventures and his view on the world around him. Meanwhile we also get to hear about the fallout from the first adventure and how Emma suffered for it.

And I honestly can't say why the story simply didn't start here. I have no issues with it being in two parts but this book simply highlights the fact that the first one was just... boring. Had it instead started here and then gradually, through 500 total pages, revealed how the first adventure started and how it went as wrong as it did, I'd have been infinitely more engrossed from the start.

I also found the supporting characters to be far more appealing. It did suffer a bit from having so few surviving characters from the first, leaving only Emma as the hardened veteran and there was never any real sense that she was going to bite the dust. Having another supporting character with experience from the plateau could've added some additional stakes.
But surprisingly I did enjoy the soldiers brought along this time a lot more than the mercenaries in the previous book. At least for the most part. Some characters were more developed than others but that was mostly thanks to simple exposure. The journalist and her cameraman are as paper thin as they can be and vanish in narrative importance as soon as they reach the jungle. Helen, one of the scientists brought along, also suffered from this, filling the roll of a damsel in distress more than anything else. These three also suffered quite a bit from "Why are they here except for body count?"-syndrome.
But I still enjoyed the characters on a whole even if I think some things could've been better. Unlike the first novel which mostly picked people off with little to no serenade, in this the scenarios were better written and felt significantly heavier. It probably helps that the number of people was dieted down significantly which allowed more time to know them.

The focus on the titanoboa as the big bad was a bit more toned down even if it did eventually come into focus again. Again it's described as a massive creature, 70 feet long which is just... I mean, the remains we have of titanoboa was a little over 40 feet long so it feels like such a massive reach to make it 70. I'm not saying it can't be but... my mind just struggled to actually picture it the size described in the book.
Luckily we get a good view of a few other prehistoric creatures to take my mind off the snake. Giganotosaurus makes its debut which was refreshing (it wasn't a t-rex, at least) but we also get a decent look at some other, lesser known specimens from the past which was fun.
And, in the end, we finally get the titanic showdown we were sort of promised in the first book, even if it did end far too quickly. If you've read the first book, you should have a pretty good idea what to expect.

One thing I REALLY wish Greig Beck hadn't done was the small, blink-and-you'll-miss-them-chapters were we get a taste from the creatures' side of things. For me it ruins the suspense a lot, knowing what's already coming, and if it was just once or twice, it would be one thing. But he did this in the first book as well and it just kind of spoiled things in advance. Imagine in Jurassic Park (the movie, I don't remember the book well enough to comment) if Spielberg had shot an entire scene of the t-rex sneaking up on the visitor's center or the raptors stalking the hunter. It simply wouldn't have been as good when the big twist came along. Not every moment is spoiled, of course, but it was done enough throughout both books that I did notice my enjoyment was lessened because of it.

But in the end I found the book well written with very few errors, a far better pacing and a much more engaging and exciting story. Narratively it's a step above the previous book which can now be almost considered a prologue to this. A part of me actually wanted to go back and retroactively lower the score from a 3 to a 2. And there was enough little things woven into this story that hinted that there might be more stories to tell which I really enjoyed. I do hope he continued to write in this little world of his but in the meantime, I'll be taking aim at some of his other work. I really, really want to give Fathomless a try and the Arcadian story continues in Dark Rising after all.
3 reviews
January 13, 2019
The sequel is better than the original in pacing and tension. Unfortunately, it has similar faults. My primary issue is with character development and willing suspension of disbelief.
There are no human villains in this story, to begin with, yet the author finds a need to include them, so turns one of the team into an almost villain and introduces two obvious cannon-fodder characters. As with the first book, we ultimately get no real satisfaction at the demise of these characters as they happen, more or less, off-screen. In the first book, when the main antagonist and one of the protagonists died in the plane, I felt very let down. The big bad guy needed a much more satisfying send-off (preferably as snake food) and it felt open-ended enough that I thought he'd be back for book 2.
In this book, the author tries to create a mystery around the deaths of the "bad guy" and associated characters. Unfortunately, it didn't work for me as you know there's got to be a showdown between the main protagonists and the Titanoboa. It also wasted whatever character development had been used on the Venezuelan journalist.
My second issue is with willing suspension of disbelief and facts, and a carry-over from the issues int he first book. The Titanoboa is believed to have been a Paleocene creature, that lived after the K-Pg boundary (the extinction of the dinosaurs) and most likely later Paleocene. That's at least 34-40 million years AFTER the events in this book! Even if it lived in early Paleocene, it is unlikely to have cohabited with dinosaurs, and certainly not Machimosaurus which lived in Africa. South American Machimosauri dies out in the late Jurassic. Similarly, Pulmonoscorpius was from the Carboniferous period and died out about 250-300 million years before Titanoboa appeared, and the Bobbit worms were from the previous period, the Devonian,
By the way people, the big dinosaur is Giganotosaurus, not Gigantosaurus. The former was late Cretaceous, the latter was Jurassic and looked like a Diplodocus.
Finally, the Titanoboa was almost half the size of the one described here, and ate fish! I realize that the author was looking for something to break out of the Jurassic Park mould, but the depiction of Titanoboa just goes too much against the facts to work for me.
If you can suspend your disbelief, however, the book is an enjoyable read, and better written than many similar books.
Profile Image for Jim.
172 reviews6 followers
July 30, 2018
PRIMORDIA: IN SEARCH OF THE LOST WORLD and the "sequel", PRIMORDIA II:RETURN TO THE LOST WORLD are actually two halves of a single novel, published in two installments about 5 months apart. Each is about 250 pages long, give or take, about half the length or a bit more of a typical Greig Beck novel. So don't get upset at the cliffhanger ending because both books are available now and all is resolved here PRIMORDIA II:RETURN TO THE LOST WORLD.

At the close of PRIMORDIA: IN SEARCH OF THE LOST WORLD, the entire expedition is lost in various and sundry, often gruesome ways except for Emma, who barely escapes with her life just as the portal to the past is about to close, trapping Ben 100 milllion years or so in the past. As the strange comet whose close apposition to Earth has a period of ten years, Emma spends the decade prepping for another trip to the Venezuelan Amazonian jungle to search for Ben, who she hopes is still somehow alive, no matter how improbably that seems. Having been there before, Emma knows exactly what to do to maximize the chances of the second expedition to be successful, and sets out with a new team handpicked to search for Ben. Of course, nothing goes as planned, and we have another exciting adventure as payoff for the cliff-hanging end of PRIMORDIA: IN SEARCH OF THE LOST WORLD.

Everything I said about the first half of this story holds here. Beck writes in a crisp, fast-paced style, and, as always his fiction well researched. Once again, the main and supporting characters are likable (except for the baddies) and well drawn and the whole thing is tons of fun. I look forward to Beck's next outing.

Highly Recommended.

JM Tepper
Profile Image for Mathilda Grace.
510 reviews
August 23, 2020
Band 2 der »Primordia«-Trilogie ist eine direkte Fortsetzung zum ersten Teil der Geschichte, die mit einem ziemlichen Cliffhanger endet und dieses Mal mit Emma beginnt, die 10 Jahre darauf gewartet hat, nach Ben suchen zu können. Nun nähert sich das kurze Zeitfenster, in dem das möglich ist und Emma versucht alles, um pünktlich wieder genau auf dem Plateau zu sein, in der Hoffnung, dass Ben überlebt hat.

Aber allein in diese grüne Hölle reisen? Das kommt für Emma nicht infrage. Dieses Mal will sie vorbereitet sein und hat alles an Waffen und einige ehemalige Kameraden von Ben aus der Armeezeit zusammengetrommelt, ehe es zurück geht in die vergessene Welt.

Allerdings ist sie nicht die Einzige, die hinter Ben her ist, um es mal so zu nennen, denn eine neugierige Reporterin wittert hinter der ganzen Geschichte die große Story für ihre Karriere, und sorgt darum mittels Erpressung dafür, dass sie auch einen Platz in der Reisegruppe erhält.

Trotz aller Vorbereitungen kommt es so, wie es zu erwarten war, denn »Primordia« ist gefährlich und gegen Dinosaurier helfen auch nicht immer Feuerwaffen. Es dauert daher nicht lange, bis es die ersten Opfer gibt und lange Zeit ist nicht klar, ob die Reise überhaupt Erfolg haben wird, denn Ben ist nicht zu finden und der Komet lässt ihnen nicht viel Zeit, um nach ihm zu sagen.

Eine spannende Fortsetzung der Geschichte, die mich wieder überzeugt hat. Wie gut, dass auch den letzten Teil bereits in meinem Bücherregal hatte, denn er beendet die Geschichte um Ben, Emma und noch einige mehr auf ziemlich spektakuläre Weise.
Profile Image for Carl.
635 reviews1 follower
November 18, 2019
While reading about “Primordia: In Search of the Lost World” (the first book), I discovered that there was a link between Arthur Conan Doyle and the main character’s great, great grandfather (who vanished while exploring the Amazon jungle in 1908); now I was hooked. “Return to the Lost World” is a well written sequel to the first book.

The Lost World is calling; Primordia and its effects only occur every ten years. Emma is set to return to the Amazon to find Ben Cartwright who was stranded there nearly 10 years ago. At this point, Emma is determined to bring Ben back, and she is willing to sacrifice everyone and everything to do it. Easier said than done!

“Return to the Lost World” is a wonderful feast offering a thrilling mix of terror, adventure, and Sci-Fi. As you may expect, there are certainly some implausible situations; still, the story offers lots of fast action and many gruesome deaths by prehistoric creatures and entities. The plot is nicely crafted but the characterization is only OK, a little stereotypical as to types of people. Regardless, I still liked this book and the escape into another world ~ if only for a few hours.
2 reviews
August 6, 2018

Again Greig Beck delivers a knockout story. Emma is set to return to the Amazon and find Ben Cartwright who was stranded there nearly 10 years ago. The door is about to reopen as Primordia approaches and Emma is ready and prepared to return, or so she thinks. Despite the best and most thorough planning including 4 of Bens former comrades who are armed to the teeth, things do not go according to plan. No one believed Emma about what happened or what happened to Ben. They are getting very quick and lethal education that everything she told them is true and the danger is grossly understand. The battle is to stay alive, find Ben if he is still alive and escape before the door closes again. The clock is ticking and the race is on, cross the finish line in time, or be stranded 100 million years in the past!
Profile Image for Brandon.
556 reviews37 followers
January 24, 2020
10 years later, Emma digs up Ben's old SOF teammates to go back and rescue him from the cretaceous jungle anomaly. Bring in the addition of Drake, a great new character; and, Ajax, the resident asshole for this installment of the series. As expected, the new crew doesn't entirely believe Emma when she tries to tell them what they'll be up against when they reach the remote jungle plateau. Once they began to see the truth with their own eyes they quickly learned how fast the carnivorous world will eat you up and spit you back out as mush (quite literally).

This series ended up being an absolutely great read. The scenery and prehistoric creatures were great, and made for awesome visualization candy. The characters and writing were superbly done as to immerse you in the story and have you running and crawling through the mud right there with them.
Profile Image for PJ Wolf.
65 reviews
July 26, 2020
I’m still struggling with the Primordia series. It is entertaining, but the the midst of the second entry in the now trilogy, it already feels very redundant. Many reviewers claimed to like this sequel more than the first installment and I just struggled my way through it. Basically, my frustration boils down to this: does everyone get killed within 24 hours or could everyone survive because this story leans very hard one way then the other. Which is it? And really, a hot air balloon could travel into this storm but not a large helicopter? Just too many “oh come on” moments in this one for me to truly enjoy it. On to the third book in the series, which again dabbles heavily in time travel paradox material that is still a set too far for me...then again Beck always writes an entertaining story...
Profile Image for Theresa.
4,128 reviews16 followers
April 19, 2020
At the end of their horrifying, deadly trip through the Lost World, Emma escaped but Ben didn’t. So she’s determined to wait the ten years and go back to rescue him- if he’s still alive. For ten years, with Ben’s mother blessing and money she researches and prepares. Then when the event is just months away, she gathers a team of ex-Special Forces and two paleontologists and heads back into the Amazon.

Great book. It has a nice ending with Ben being rescued. But as the next becomes less of an Amazon adventure story and more of a time paradox with Andy’s decision, I’m not going to read it – right now.

Fave scenes: Ben’s theropod trap, the pterosaur on the balloon, Andy’s note and descending the well.
Profile Image for Luka.
209 reviews3 followers
January 30, 2021
Auch den zweiten Band dieser Reihe konnte ich nur schwer zur Seite legen!!!
Mir gefällt er sogar noch ein bisschen besser 😍
Es ist unfassbar, wenn Autoren mit einem Spielen und Greig Beck ruft in mir unheimlich tiefe Skepsis hervor, weil ich dem Ganzen nicht traue, wenn's eine gute, glückliche Szene gibt xD
Es besteht bei ihm einfach immer die Gefahr, dass doch noch etwas schlimmes passiert!
Ich bin froh, dass dieses Buch diesmal verhältnismäßig gut ausgegangen ist und bin schon sehr gespannt auf Teil drei!!!

Vier Sterne gibt es hauptsächlich wegen des Verlags, der mir zu viele Fehler in den Büchern übersieht 😖
Profile Image for Tuttu.
69 reviews
January 25, 2025
J'ai encore une fois bien apprécié ce livre. Une nouvelle équipe se rend dans le pire endroit au monde à cette époque de l'année pour retrouver Ben et on est pas déçu par ce qu'il se passe.
Le début du livre alterne entre le présent et le passé, nous montrant un peu du quotidien préhistorique de Ben.
Et ensuite, tout part en sucette !
---------------
I really enjoyed this book once again. A new team goes to the worst place in the world at this time of year to find Ben and we are not disappointed by what happens.
The beginning of the book alternates between the present and the past, showing us a bit of Ben's prehistoric daily life.
And then, everything goes to hell!
149 reviews2 followers
September 27, 2018
Exciting, fast-paced sci-fy wonder

Greig Beck's knowledge of prehistoric animals, plants and insects gives "Primordia 2" the same realistic background as "Primordia 1." The human characters are diverse with gifts and liabilities that help some and hinder some. Please read "Primordia 1" then "Primordia 2." They are of a genre I had not read before. If Mr. Beck has written any other books, I will be reading them. I like his writing style and he obviously has a good proofreader. Buy them. Enjoy!!
Profile Image for Mr Chuck.
318 reviews7 followers
January 15, 2024
Tarzan with guns.

Ben Cartwright's girlfriend goes back with a team of soldiers to rescue him and explore the world. Que in some big dinos, bigger snakes, and people making dumb choices all while Ben survives for 10 years waiting to get back home.

This series is a little brain-dead and just easy to read hence why I'm going to finish it but 10 years alone in the jungle would have you go mental, I mean Castaway, Jumanji had it easy compared to Ben but he just strolls around like he's out for Sunday lunch.

On to the next one I guess.

Profile Image for Dale Smith.
234 reviews1 follower
May 21, 2019
10 years have passed, and wettest season is coming back to Venezuela. 10 years older, more determined and willing to do anything necessary, Emma is on her way back, with a pack of Special Forces soldiers, and some tag-a-longs. Will she find Ben, or has living 100 million years in the past been too much for him? Will Emma and her crew make it back? The Lost World is calling, and at this point Emma's determined to bring Ben back, and willing to sacrifice everyone and everything to do it.
595 reviews
January 28, 2020
Another great adventure based on what would happen if you got lost or trapped with prehistoric based roaming around. I must admit I’ve always loved dinosaurs, yes even at my old age. This was no disappointment as Greg always researchers has information extremely well. A must read for all adventure lovers out there, especially those who like the excitement of a great romance as well as mystery of what could happen next?
Look forward to returning the next time, but so glad I can at least leave.
Profile Image for Kirsten Ateeq.
314 reviews2 followers
January 6, 2021
Der erste Teil war so faszinierend das ich nun den zweiten Teil verschlungen habe und der dritte schon neben mir liegt. Die Geschichte geht weiter, ist spannend, geheimnisvoll und auch sehr lehrreich. Man wird in eine andere Welt entführt, kann sie sich sehr gut bildlich vorstellen und kann dem Hauptdarsteller nur beipflichten, der sagt: " eine Welt in der, der Mensch, noch Millionen von Jahren nichts zu suchen hat!"
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