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Pacific Vortex!
  

Pacific Vortex! (Paperback)

by Clive Cussler (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (35 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Ingram

Undersea adventurer Dirk Pitt faces the toughest challenge of his life when he plunges into a deadly sea zone to rescue the gigantic Starbuck, America's nuclear arsenal, while battling deep-sea assassins. Reissue. --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.


From the Publisher

Dirk Pitt's first, most terrific adventure! Dirk Pitt, death-defying adventurer and deep-sea expert, is out to the ultimate test as he plunges into the perilous waters of the Pacific Vortex -- a fog-shrouded sea zone where dozens of ships have vanished without a trace. The latest victim is the awesome superb Starbuck, America's deep-diving nuclear arsenal. Its loss poses an unthinkable threat to national defense. Pitt's job is to find it, salvage it, before the sea explodes. In a furious race against time, Pitt's mission swirls him into a battle with underwater assassins-and traps him in the arms of Summer Moran, the most stunningly exotic and dangerous toward disaster, Clive Cussler plummets his hero onto an ancient sunken island-the astonishing setting for the explosive climax of Pacific Vortex! --This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

35 Reviews
5 star:
 (13)
4 star:
 (17)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (35 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars Lotsa fun, vintage nostalgiac Cussler, but missing a piece!, Jun 14 2004
By Christian D. Orr (OFallon, IL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Obviously, this being the first-ever Dirk Pitt novel, this book has nostalgiac historical significance for us Clive Cussler fans. I first read this book 18 years ago when I was a mere 6th-grader, so re-reading it now I have a sense of perspective I didn't have then, especially on the military stuff (since I've been in the USAF for almost 5 years as I write this).


One thing I notice from re-reading "Pacific Vortex" as well as Clive's other oldies-but-goodies like "Raise the Titanic!" and "Vixen 03" is that they're a lot more graphic in terms of descriptions of physical violence and salty language (in terms of both profanity and sexual innuendo) compared with his newer stuff like "Trojan Odyssey" and "Valhalla Rising;" is this a sign of ol' Clive getting more mellow with age?

But as "a reader from Bordentown" has already pointed out, there's a big missing piece: in all the sequels, Cussler always refers to Pitt's ill-fated true love, Summer Moran . . . yet upon reading this book, there's no love scene with Dirk and Summer . . . so how the heck did Summer indeed turn about to be the father of his two kids? Perhaps it was an oversight on Cussler's part when he wrote the book, rookie error as he rushed to finish the manuscript, perhaps?

Fun stuff all the same!

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4.0 out of 5 stars A 'hairy barrel chest' and other traits of a superagent, April 25 2004
By Scott Porch (Savannah, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Dirk Pitt. Seriously. If this book hadn't been written 30 years ago - and ten years before it was finally published - I would swear that Clive Cussler's name of his lead character Dirk Pitt was an obvious wink to Dirk Diggler (Mark Wahlberg in "Boogie Nights") and Brad Pitt (in anything). I can't think of another "Dirk" or "Pitt" that comes anywhere close. He's suave, he's cool, he's - updated for the 80s - wearing "brief white bathing trunks" when first we meet him. And he's sunbathing, no less.

Mr. Pitt - Dirk, not Brad - has starred in 17 of Cussler's swashbuckling adventure thrillers. (Cussler wrote "Pacific Vortex!" first, though it was not published until 1982 when Dirk Pitt was a fixture on the best seller's list. According to "Dirk Pitt Revealed," Cussler's 1998 concordance/encyclopedia of all things Dirk Pitt, "Pacific Vortex!" was initially deemed a weak first effort.) I was tempted to start with "Flood Tide" (1997) or "Atlantis Found" (1999), recent best sellers that are plentiful in paperback and in the remainder bins, but I like my genre novels to unfold in the order the author intended.

But enough exposition: Dirk Pitt is a star in "Pacific Vortex!," and a star for reasons Cussler never intended. He's rugged, debonair and likes the ladies, to be sure, but he screams 80s louder than a Boy George t-shirt. In the picturesque opening scene, Dirk Pitt is sunbathing in those brief white bathing trunks on a Hawaiian beach. As he naps, "[t]he hairy barrel chest that rose slightly with each intake of air, bore specks of sweat that rolled downward in snaillike trails and mingled with the sand." Oh, my. While I read, I alternately imagined him as Tom Selleck circa "Magnum, P.I." and Ben Stiller in "Starsky & Hutch," the real and the surreal - the yin and yang - versions of the 80s man.

The obvious comparison is James Bond, and it's a fair one. Dirk Pitt is comfortable schmoozing over cocktails. In the most unintentionally hilarious scene of the book, two women are literally fighting over Dirk while he suavely sips scotch. "The bruise beneath her right eye had begun the transformation from red to purple, and a small cut on her lower lip unleashed a few drops of blood that trickled down her chin, falling with precise accuracy down the cleavage between her breasts. Pitt still thought she was the most desirably woman he'd ever seen." Enough said. Oddly, there are no bow-chick-a-wow-wow scenes, but you know Dirk's gettin' some. The "sexy" scenes are usually of the slow-motion-body-shimmering-in-the-moonlight variety. Most are hysterical.

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4.0 out of 5 stars I am happy I discovered this series!, Mar 22 2004
By Sebastian Fernandez (Tampa, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
I have never been a big fan of military thrillers. The only author I read regularly in this genre is Nelson DeMille and I enjoy him a lot, so I decided to give Clive Cussler a try. I am happy to say I was not disappointed! Even though "Pacific Vortex" was not the first published book in the Dirk Pitt adventures series, it was the first Cussler wrote, so logically, this is the novel I picked to start my journey. I found an interesting character that lives at the edge and is passionate about his work. Also in some aspects he is similar to James Bond, women mainly, and the mix is sufficient to keep the reader thoroughly entertained.

For six months the US government has been trying to find the Starbuck, a submarine lost in the Hawaiian (Pacific) vortex. This is an area similar to the well-known Bermuda Triangle. The submarine was lost on its maiden trial and possesses the most advanced equipment, in terms of nuclear capabilities, that the US has developed so far. The last known communication from the nuclear submarine came from captain Dupree, establishing that they were lost without possibilities of recovering themselves and giving the coordinates of their location. While in his holidays in the coast of Hawaii, Dirk finds a communications capsule from the Starbuck addressed to Admiral Hunter in Pearl Harbor. Thus, he is directly involved in the search for the submarine and starts a dangerous journey in which he will face different enemies, conspiracies and uncertainty about who to trust. He also meets a mysterious woman, Summer, who will rock his world and complicate matters further.

Cussler has created a very entertaining series, with a character that has an arrogant and pedantic side, but whom also shows his pure emotions and is true to his friends and ideals. This makes the Special Project Director of the National Underwater and Marine Agency a very likable character. This is a book that a reader can breeze through in a few hours making it an enjoyable way to spend a weekend's afternoon. I will surely read the next book in this series hoping for a similar experience.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Fun
Dirk Pitt is the James Bond meets John Wayne character that every guy would love to be. Pitt's a "man's man." He smokes, but he still scuba dives with the best of them. Read more
Published on Feb 11 2004 by Nawfal

5.0 out of 5 stars How did they do it?
After reading the ending of Valhalla Rising, where Pitt discovers that he has grown children resulting from his relationship with Summer in this novel, I went back and reread this... Read more
Published on Jan 6 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Now that I graduated from the Hardy Boys!
I rearely have as much fun reading a book as I do when it is a Dirk Pitt novel. It sends me back. When I was a kid in the fourth or fifth grade I used to voraciously consume... Read more
Published on Dec 29 2003 by Gabriel LLanas

4.0 out of 5 stars Fast Read
This was the first of many Cussler books. It was such an easy read I was unable to put the book down. I have made a habbit of setting time aside for his books. Read more
Published on Nov 17 2003 by Travis Teel

4.0 out of 5 stars The place to begin your Dirk Pitt adventure
This book successfully provided a day of entertainment! Being somewhat shorter than most of Cussler's books allows a quick emmersion into the adventures of NUMA agent Dirk... Read more
Published on Oct 1 2003 by Andrew A. Nyberg

3.0 out of 5 stars Good but not Cussler's best
Pacific Vortex is good, but not Cussler's best. Not that it matters, but this is the first Dirk Pitt book published. I like how some of the later Pitt books are longer. Read more
Published on Aug 3 2003 by BRAD BAUGHMAN

3.0 out of 5 stars Good but not Cussler's best
I thought that Pacific Vortex was a good book, but not Cussler's best. Not that it matters, but this is the first Dirk Pitt book. Read more
Published on May 16 2003

4.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece
I thought that this book was wonderful. Even with the disclaimer from Mr. Cussler that this was the first Dirk Pitt book and he wasn't sure about publishing it, it was still... Read more
Published on April 21 2003 by J. Peterson

4.0 out of 5 stars Great into to the series....
I love the entire Dirk Pitt series and Pacific Vortex was the 8th one I read. They are all good. I can't wait to read the rest....
Published on Mar 27 2003 by Jeffrey Roberts

4.0 out of 5 stars A solid novel...
While this novel, although relased as one of the early-middle Dirk Pitt books. It was actually the first Dirk Pitt story that Clive ever wrote, and you can tell. Read more
Published on Mar 28 2002 by Joshua P. Baldwin

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