![]() Maybe because I’ve read both Bill Bryson’s A Short History of Nearly Everything and Dan Brown’s Deception Point recently. But there’s a sudden twist in the very last sentence, and I even saw that coming from a little way out. Overall, I think anyone who reads the back cover has a good idea what’s going to happen. I was pretty conflicted about who the bad guys and good guys were. I could have done without a lot of the day-to-day engineering feats they pulled off. This was an odd mixture of a book that I couldn’t put down and a book that felt like it was creeping along. Without Chile’s government officials finding out about it. It’s only been about a week since I read this book, but I’m already hazy on the details, so this will be vague.īasically, this super-rich guy hires an engineering firm with a perfect record of doing the “impossible” to extract a meteorite from the ground of a Chilean island off of Cape Horn. ![]()
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