Grave Descend by Michael Crichton - Hardcover
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Grave DescendHardcover

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From the creator of Jurassic Park and ER

Leagues below the sparkling blue water of the Caribbean Sea lies the mysterious wreckage of the Grave Descend. Protected by a wall of coral reef and blood-thirsty sharks, the corpse of the sunken yacht has been deemed unrecoverable by every diver in the world. Until James McGregor is offered a shot at it.

For McGregor, a thirty-nine-year-old diver with a long history of unsavory salvage jobs, it’s his last chance at a big payday. But the more he learns about the wreck, the more questions he uncovers—because none of the survivors are telling the same story. How did the ship really sink? What was its cargo? And why is this whole project starting to feel like a suicide mission?

With a new introduction by Sherri Crichton

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ISBN-10

820098705D

ISBN-13

979-8200987054

Print length

243 pages

Language

English

Publisher

Blackstone Publishing, Inc.

Publication date

November 04, 2024

Dimensions

9 x 6 x 2 inches

Item weight

4 pounds


Product details

ASIN :

B0CZSCN582

File size :

1592 KB

Text-to-speech :

Enabled

Screen reader :

Supported

Enhanced typesetting :

Enabled

X-Ray :

Enabled

Word wise :

Enabled


Editorial Reviews

"A must-read for Crichton fans." --Fiction Addict

About the Author

Christopher Lane has narrated more than 100 audiobooks, including Earphones and Audie Award winners. He has taught acting at Boston College and has appeared extensively onstage, receiving the Helen Hayes Award for his performance in Equus. He lives in New England.

Michael Crichton was a writer and filmmaker, best known as the author of Jurassic Park and the creator of ER. One of the most popular entertainers in the world, Crichton sold more than 200 million copies of his books which have been translated into 40 languages and adapted into 15 films. Long before the carefully researched techno-thrillers that ultimately brought him to fame, Crichton wrote high-octane suspense novels to support himself while studying at Harvard Medical School. He published eight of these books under the pseudonym John Lange between the years of 1966 and 1972. They provided him with the means to complete his education. He graduated at the top of his class.


Sample

Much may be made of a Scotchman, if he be caught young. —samuel johnson

ONE

Starting in the early dawn light, he had driven up into the mountains, leaving the flat sprawl of Kingston behind him. He had cut through the tiny mountain villages, the native huts perched precariously beside the road; then down through lush valleys of tropical vegetation, damp in the misty morning wetness; and finally up once more to the cold air of the peaks which sheltered the north coast.

Now it was eight o’clock in the morning, and he was coming down, hunched over his bike, doing a hundred, with the sound of the engine in his ears, and the wind in his hair. In the distance, he could see blue water, with waves breaking across the inner reefs, and hotels lining the beachfront. A momentary glimpse: then he plunged into the final twisting green decline which led him to Ocho Rios.

McGregor hated Ocho Rios. Once a beautiful and elegant strip of coastline, it was now a long succession of gaudy hotels, ratty nightclubs, stud services, and steel-band discos, all patronized by hordes of vacuous tourists who were seeking something a little more expensive but no different from Miami Beach.

It was to serve such tourists that the Plantation Inn had been built, an enormous complex on twenty acres of lavish grounds, phony colonial buildings, restaurants, and snack bars. It was shielded from the road by a high fence. There was a guard in khakis at the gate, a smooth-faced native man who saluted each limousine of tourists as it arrived from the airport.

The guard did not salute McGregor, however. Instead, he held up one hand, and rested the other on the butt of his holstered gun.

“You have business here?”

McGregor stopped, idling the bike. “I’m seeing Mr. Wayne.”

“Mr. Who?”

“Wayne. W-A-Y-N-E.”

The guard checked the guest register on a clipboard, made a mark against one name, and nodded. “Keep the noise down,” he said, as he stood aside to let McGregor pass. “The guests are sleeping.”

McGregor smiled, gunned his bike, and roared noisily into the compound. He passed manicured gardens, beds of bright flowers, carefully watered palms. At length he pulled up in front of the main hotel building, which was only three years old, but carefully constructed to resemble an old Jamaican plantation.

He parked the bike and went into the lobby. At the front desk, the clerk in a red jacket and tie stared at his greasy dungarees and dirty blue pullover. “May we help you, sir?” he asked, with an expression that was intended to be a smile, but was closer to a wince.

“Mr. Wayne.”

“Is he, uh, expecting you?”

“Yes, he is uh expecting me,” McGregor said.

The man winced a little more. “Your name, please?”

“James McGregor.”

The clerk picked up the telephone, dialed, and spoke quietly for a moment before hanging up. He was clearly displeased, but managed to say, “Take the elevator to the right. Room four-two-three.”

McGregor nodded, and said nothing.

Despite the early hour, Arthur Wayne was up and dressed, sitting at a small table on which breakfast had been laid out. He was a lean man in his middle fifties, with a severe face and gray, cold eyes; despite the casual resort atmosphere, he wore a three-piece pinstripe suit.

“Sit down, McGregor,” he said, buttering his toast. “You made good time. Want some breakfast?”

“Just coffee,” McGregor said. He lit a cigarette and sat in a chair near the window. “How’d you know where to reach me?”

“You mean, at your . . . friend’s?” Wayne smiled, and poured a cup of coffee. “We have our ways. I didn’t really think you’d be here so fast, though.”

“I told you, eight thirty.”

“Yes, but we called at six, and it’s four hours from Kingston to Ocho—”

“Not the way I do it.”

“Clearly,” Wayne said. “Clearly.” He bit into the toast and glanced over at McGregor. A businessman’s glance, steady, appraising. “You’re older than I expected.”

“So are you.”

“How old are you, anyway?” He set down his toast, and started on the scrambled eggs. “Tell me a little about yourself.”

“There’s not much to tell,” McGregor said. “I’m a diver. I’m thirty-nine. I’ve lived in Kingston fourteen years. Before that I did salvage work out of New York and Miami. It didn’t pay, and I hated it, so I came down here.”

“And before New York?”

“I was in the Pacific, clearing beaches for the Marines.”

Wayne chewed his eggs. “What was that like?”

“Like a bad dream.” McGregor puffed on the cigarette, and stared out of the window. He disliked this part: the early establishment of credentials with the client. You had to put on a good show. He hoped Wayne wouldn’t get onto the leg business. “I heard you were injured in the war,” Wayne said.

“Yes. Nearly lost a leg. It took the medics three years afterward to get it back together.”

“Remarkable,” Wayne said, still chewing. “Remarkable. Well, I won’t beat around the bush, Mr. McGregor. You come highly recommended to us. We’re very eager to have you.”

McGregor smiled slightly. “Especially since I’m the only one on the island equipped to do the job?”

“We are more concerned,” Wayne said, “about finding the right man for the job.”

“But your alternative is flying in a team from Florida or Nassau, and that costs. It costs plenty—all that heavy equipment.”

“Are you telling me you’re raising your rates?” Wayne said.

“Just thinking about it.”

“I won’t beat around the bush,” Wayne said. “This is an important, very delicate job. We’ll pay you anything you ask, within reason.”

“Depends on the job.”

“Then let me tell you,” Wayne said, wiping his mouth with a napkin, “about the job.”

He pushed away from the table, and, coughing slightly, lit a cigarette. He reached for a large briefcase and opened it, taking out maps, charts, and marine blueprints, which he spread across the floor.

Then he picked up a glossy photograph of a ship, and handed it to McGregor.

“This is the problem,” he said. “The yacht Grave Descend. One hundred twenty-three feet at the waterline, luxury fittings, five staterooms, each with bath—”

McGregor said, “Tonnage?”

“Forty-four twenty, I think.”

“You think?”

Wayne checked his papers. “Yes . . . forty-four twenty.”

“Where did it go down?”

“Five miles east of here, and three-quarters of a mile offshore, give or take. According to the best estimates, it’s about here”—he gave McGregor a marine chart—“just outside the outer reefs. There’s two reefs here, an inner reef of about twenty feet, and an outer reef that falls off to—”

“I know about the reefs,” McGregor said. “When did it go down?”

“Yesterday.”

McGregor paused. “Yesterday?”

Wayne sucked on his cigarette, and smiled. “You’re wondering why I am here so soon. Marine insurance companies aren’t usually so punctual in sending a representative—isn’t that what you are thinking?”

“Roughly.”

“I think you will understand as time goes on. The boat is insured for two million ten, so we are understandably concerned, but that is only part of the problem.”

McGregor frowned. He had never heard of a marine insurance rep calling a ship a boat before. And Wayne was remarkably disorganized. He looked again at the map. “How does she lie?”

“We’re not sure. We think the bow faces north, toward open water, and that the stern rests here. That would put the stern in about sixty-five feet, and the bow in about eighty. The drop-off is quite sharp here—”

“Fragmentation?”

“No. As far as we know, not. It is, we hope, intact.”

“But you don’t know.”

“No. We don’t.”

McGregor frowned. “Whose is she?”

“She belongs to an American industrialist who made his fortune in steel. He bought it from an Australian nine months ago, and kept it in the Mediterranean until a few weeks ago. He brought it across to Miami—West Palm, actually, to a marina there—for repairs, and then had it sailed here.”

“He wasn’t aboard?”

“No. He lives outside Pittsburgh, and was planning to fly down, and take her from Ocho down to Aruba.”

McGregor nodded. “And you want me to tell you if it can be raised?”

“Among other things,” Wayne said. “But we have an additional concern, of great importance to us, from the insurance standpoint.”

“What’s that?”

“We want to know why it went down in the first place,” Wayne said, and stubbed out his cigarette.

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About the authors

Michael Crichton

Michael Crichton

MICHAEL CRICHTON the author of the groundbreaking novels Jurassic Park, The Andromeda Strain, The Great Train Robbery, Disclosure, Prey, State of Fear, Sphere, Congo, Next and Micro among many others. His books have sold more than 200 million copies worldwide, have been translated into thirty-eight languages, and have provided the basis for fifteen feature films, most notably Jurassic Park. He directed Westworld, Coma, The Great Train Robbery and Looker, and also created the hit television series ER. Crichton remains the only writer to have a number one book, movie, and TV show in the same year.

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Reviews

Customer reviews

4.1 out of 5

5,039 global ratings

mv

mv

5

Fun read

Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2024

Verified Purchase

The book is fast paced and well written. It is an action packed thriller. Not terribly realistic, but fun beach Read.

PJ

PJ

5

Great read.

Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2024

Verified Purchase

This early work of Crichton shows how talented an author he was. Written under a pseudonym while he was still in college it’s very much like his later works: a page turner.

2 people found this helpful

Ryan

Ryan

5

A fun action adventure novel

Reviewed in the United States on May 27, 2024

Verified Purchase

This is a fun easy to read action adventure novel set in Jamaica. It contains all the elements of a good thriller.

Bugycleaner

Bugycleaner

5

CLEAN AND EXCITING

Reviewed in the United States on July 18, 2024

Verified Purchase

I have not been fond of the authors books. a few of them I have enjoyed but some of them just or two scientific. This book was very good. I really like the diver and I liked his friend who saved his life several times.. the story was old-fashioned, but it was very good. Had very few bad words in it a very fast moving story not too long but a fun read.. he wrote it when he was new at writing and I think that’s why it was so good, his other books are too deep and scientific and get bogged down and junk. But this one, I recommend anybody read it. It’s good.

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Kathiecakes

Kathiecakes

5

Loved it!

Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2024

Verified Purchase

Just finished. Fun to read. Page turner! Still haven’t read Prey or Sphere. May try again. Loved Congo the most but not the movie!

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