Book Review: Alex Archer’s Cradle of Solitude
While in Paris, Annja Creed discovers the skeleton of a Confederate soldier, the keeper of a treasure that could have changed the Civil War.
While in Paris, Annja Creed discovers the skeleton of a Confederate soldier, the keeper of a treasure that could have changed the Civil War.
It’s that close encounter with the tiger shark that thrusts Annja Creed in with a group of German divers seeking the Pearl of Palawan, said to grant immortality.
It started as a dream while Annja Creed is on a dig in the English Midlands. Then she finds long-dead king’s torc, one that has tremendous…and terrible power in the wrong hands.
Whispers abound that the faeries are disappearing people from the dig, people searching for the legendary Spear of Lugh. Naturally Annja’s producer wants her to investigate.
A vicious man is after a friend of Annja Creed’s who has a map that leads to a place that lies outside our world. To help, Annja must search for Shangri-La.
Thailand is supposed to be a vacation for archeologist Annja Creed and boyfriend, but the pull of the Spirit Cave and the voices of the dead pull Annja in.
A massive, thought-to-be-extinct shark known as the megalodon protects a long-lost war ship, the Fantome, carrying an extraordinary treasure.
Someone wants the Skull of Sidon, an object created by the Knights Templar long ago. An artifact the power of which bends to the true nature of its owner.
Contracted by a mining company to oversee a respectful relocation of the Araktak buried atop a diamond deposit, Annja Creed goes up against a group intent on unleashing a powerful artifact.
Archaeologist Annja Creed doubts the map will truly lead to Genghis Khan’s lost tomb, but as she races in, one thing is clear—the only tomb she may find is her own…