Fun action/adventure-mystery story, though relatively recent (published 2009), it felt in many ways much older in style and content, like something that could have been published in the 1960s-1980s (though the book is set modern day). Essentially, take the feel of Indiana Jones and The Mummy films, with their dangerous archaeological finds that could potentially change the world, the hero racing bad guys to get to them first (and maybe playing really fast and loose with the rules of archaeology) and mix in James Bond, with a sort of secret organization sending out an agent who will face a Bond-type villain who has a powerful and distinctive main henchman along with lots of goons, as well as throw in a couple of Bond girl-types in the story and lots of chases and fight scenes as well as literal cliffhangers. If any of that sounds appealing, I think you will like this book.
The main character, and the supposed author of the book, Gabriel Hunt, is a famous adventurer-archaeologist-writer who has been all over the world, been in National Geographic, and made many amazing discoveries, including some that are just on the edge perhaps of being supernatural, though often in the end with little proof. He works for the powerful and wealthy Hunt Foundation with his brother Michael, searching the world for archaeological treasures and more or less legally bringing them to museums.
The book starts with a black-tie soiree marking the opening of a new Hunt Foundation sponsored Ancient Egyptian exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. To Michael’s and Gabriel’s surprise, an unexpected guest arrives, a stunning woman named Mariella Montez, who is there to give something to the Hunt Foundation, but she doesn’t get a chance to, as by page 4 (!) she is being kidnapped by bad guys! What she is brought is left behind, a Confederate flag that appears to actually date back to the Civil War, one that looks different though from any Confederate flag they have ever seen and yields very important clues, and a whiskey bottle that shattered during the kidnapping, one that seemed to be as old as the flag, but only contained water?
With people going after Gabriel and possibly Michael, despite already having Mariella and stopping her giving the apparently valuable water to the Hunt Foundation, Gabriel and later other allies he picks up along the way go on a massive adventure. People repeatedly try to kill Gabriel in gun fights, hand-to-hand combat, car chases, and boat chases as Gabriel faces them in New York City and later as the trail takes him to Florida and then Mexico then finally Guatemala. It seemed like every five to ten pages Gabriel is getting in a car chase, gun fight, scaling a cliff, in a boat chase, in a fist fight, something. He also finds time for love too, with Dr. Cierra Almanzar, director of the Museum of the Americas in Mexico City (the woman on the cover; interestingly, almost the exact scene is in the book, only one tiny detail that I can recall was off).
Though there is a lot of violence, I don’t think anything was too gory though. There is some love making, but it is basically the curtains blowing the in the breeze cutaway type scenes; it happened, but you aren’t shown anything. It was fun, fast-paced, nothing too deep, writing was crisp and flowed nicely. I think the big archaeological secret was easily guessed, but that didn’t make the book any less fun. I appreciated how though the central mystery involved a Confederate general, it didn’t hand-wave away any issues with the Confederacy while at the same time not spending vast amounts of time talking about it; it was acknowledged, talked about a few times, and back to the adventure.