Black Order: A Sigma Force Novel

Image of Black Order: A Sigma Force Novel
Author(s): 
Release Date: 
June 26, 2006
Publisher/Imprint: 
William Morrow
Pages: 
448
Reviewed by: 

When a book mixes science, religious philosophy, and secret societies dating back to the Nazis, you can expect a really spicy pulp stew. Veterinarian turned thriller novelist James Rollins delivers just that, and the meal is absolutely scrumptious from the first page bite to the last closing line morsel. Black Order is easily one of the best modern pulp adventures.

The adventure opens during the closing days of World War II when allied forces are racing against each other to lay claim to Germany’s scientific innovations developed during the war to include everything from rocket propulsion to medical experimentation.

Amidst this chaos, one German commando unit is attempting to flee the invaders and smuggle out the results of an amazing breakthrough in quantum physics that could alter the shape of mankind forever. Along with these papers and artifacts is a baby unlike any other in the world; the first of a race of true supermen.

Like any good thriller writer, Rollins then jumps ahead in time to the present where members of a special Washington based group known as Sigma Force are involved with what they believe to two distinct missions. The first is an antique book auction being held in Copenhagen and the second is a distress call from a Tibetan monk residing in a monastery located deep in the Himalayas.

Commander Gray Pierce follows the European case that centers around a group of killers eager to get their hands on Darwin’s Bible. It supposedly contains secret runes put there by a former German scientist involved with a secret project known only as the Bell. At the same time, Sigma Director Painter Crowe arrives in Tibet, only to find the monks have somehow gone insane and murdered each other. No sooner does he uncover this horror then he is captured and taken to a hidden mountain lair operated by the descendants of the very same German researchers who developed this mysterious Bell.

Rollins’ genius is that he keeps both plot threads moving at breakneck speed, constantly putting Pierce and Crowe in cliffhanger perils and then deftly jumping from one to the other. Thus the action seems to flow nonstop, scene after exciting scene. He also glues these action set pieces with thought provoking debates on what is evolution and where do science and religion meet in its process. Is there a grand design and will quantum physics someday open the blueprint to creation? That these weighty dissertations occur while men are being shot at, mountains exploding and mutated monsters roam the jungles of South Africa is all part of the roller-coaster ride Black Order delivers.

James Rollins is at the top of the list of top-notch modern day pulp writers and Black Order reaffirms that position beautifully.