This book was so cool. I just love this thing about thrillers - they make you suspect something, pushing you in a concrete direction on purpose only to prove you entirely wrong. A bit annoying on one side because I'm so eager to be correct but the element of surprise in everything, as Ben Hope surely knows. He is my most favourite bookish character for sure. I just love everything about his personality and he's not a bad looking guy either. Ben has a very intriguing sense of humour, meaning he's so sarcastic and has absolutely no filter to what he's saying makes a precious end result. Every time I read a Ben Hope novel, I know I'm in for quite a laugh here, no joke. Anyway, to the book itself.
Valley of Death started in a complete mystery. Two accidents somehow connected to each other but with no clue whatsoever how and why. Another reason to love thrillers - they make every little part of your brain work in order to solve the puzzle because it mystifies you and you just need to know the answer. Once again, Ben had to pick the trace and solve the puzzle, making the reader follow his steps on the way to unsolving the whole mystery.
Honestly, the first time I saw the title I thought of the Death Valley in the USA, no less deathlier than it's counterpart in India for other reasons. Personally, I thought the valley would be really deadly in some way but oh well, it was deadly for the people who lived there long ago due to other reasons but the title is still pretty accurate. They died in this valley so...
I do love the historical parts in a thriller and I was hoping to get a little more so here but the ending... it just sounded so logical and so right. I knew that this treasure wouldn't be in the form of well, the treasure anyone might think about. It all made sense for this civilisation to be lost dying in this very same Indus Valley.
I liked that Scott decided to include a different country in Ben's endless list of adventure places, aka India. I have a mixed opinion of the country just like itself is a combination of very rich and very poor people. The culture is unique and different but at the same time, so far behind in some of their belief and traditions. Personally, as a woman, I don't feel safe travelling to such not so developed destinations because let's face it, many parts of the world are yet to introduce even the minimal equality and rights for women and I hardly trust a door I locked myself, so I'd check it twice, trusting anybody in going to such a country? Nope. No way. Still, it's impressive how the authors get all the knowledge and information they need for their books, especially thrillers without visiting the places themselves. It's hard to visit war-thorn Middle-East or African regions after all, even for a man the risk is huge, so it's all up to the imagination and very in-depth research.
I'm so hyped for book 20, House of War, it's a milestone on top of that, so I'm expecting something special. After I read the sneak peek here I'm so eager to read more, it just fueled my interested to the edge and I have a good few months to wait. Yeah, the worst part of following unfinished series with new books coming up in the future.