From Publishers Weekly
Cussler takes a breather from his several ongoing series
with this historical thriller set in the western states,
circa 1906. The U.S. government hires the renowned Van Dorn
Detective Agency and its equally renowned lead agent, Isaac
Bell, to capture the bank robber known as the Butcher Bandit.
The Butcher has gunned down 38 men and women and two children,
leaving behind neither witnesses nor clues. Bell heads the
manhunt and finally figures out the Butcher's true identity,
which is when the real chase begins. Unfortunately, Cussler's
style is patterned on the clunky dialogue (I pray you catch
the murdering scum) and improbable characters of the period's
dime novels, and his in-depth research makes his descriptions
sound like advertising. Once San Francisco gets hit by the
1906 earthquake and the principals climb aboard a pair of
fire-breathing locomotives, the novel cranks up a head of
steam and some high-speed thrills. (Nov.)
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to the Hardcover edition.
From Booklist
Cussler is the author or coauthor of 33 books, including
19 Dirk Pitt novels and 7 NUMA Files books. This latest
adventure involves the hulk of a steam locomotive that comes
to the surface of a lake in Montana in 1950. It contains
the bodies of three men who died 44 years before. Flash
back to 1906 and a two-year crime spree out west. There's
a series of bank robberies by an evil person who murders
any witnesses. The government brings in a detective to solve
the case, but soon the hunter becomes the hunted. As always,
Cussler ties everything together in the end. The author's
many fans probably know that at the start, but they will
want to read the novel anyway. Cohen, George