Join Books.org — it's free

Fiction
The Trojan Sea by Richard Herman — book cover

The Trojan Sea

by Richard Herman
Available on Bookshop Write a review

Books.org participates in affiliate programs including Bookshop.org and the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program. We may earn a commission from qualifying purchases made through links on this page, at no additional cost to you.

Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

There is a new order to the world. The first female president of the United States sits in the White House. Monster corporations wield the real global power. And all the old rules have changed.


From Richard Herman, whom Clive Cussler calls "one of the best adventure writers around" and the Denver Post places "on a par with Tom Clancy," comes a spellbinding new novel of intrigue, politics, deception, murder, and the bloody manipulation of world events for the sake of pure profit.


Beautiful and brilliant, Lee Justine (L.J.) Ellis is, at thirty-eight, the youngest CEO ever of a major oil corporation. Ruthless, charismatic, greedy, and philanthropic, she is a strange dichotomy of positive and negative, a driven crusader on a god-given mission. And now she owns something worth killing for: secret knowledge of vast, untapped reserves of oil right in America's backyard ... beneath the territorial waters of a sworn enemy ... Cuba. It is a prize she must capture at any cost.


Lieutenant Colonel Mike Stuart is the most average of men. A military functionary toiling in bureaucratic tedium, he could never hope to live up to the legendary reputation of his father -- one of the great air force fighter pilots -- so he is resigned to serving his country in his own quiet way. But in his daily war of figures and on-screen data, Stuart notices an unusual pattern of oil tanker movement and he dutifully reports it to his superiors. Suddenly Mike Stuart's ordinary life starts spinning dangerously out of control.


A series of seemingly random "accidents" and narrow escapes -- all explainable and unremarkable, except for the number of them -- puts him on the alert. But when his ex-wife and her lover are killed in Stuart's car, he realizes that his growing paranoia is frighteningly justified. There are powerful forces closing in on one inconspicuous man, trapping him in the wide flung net of a devastating conspiracy that could brutally change the political face of a hemisphere, bring a government down in flames and chaos ... and take the life of America's's president.


Now Mike Stuart is being called upon to defend his nation in ways he never imagined. And his sole chance for success -- and survivals to become something he has never been: a warrior.

About the Author, Richard Herman

A former weapons system operator, Richard Herman was a member of the United States Air Force for twenty-one years, until he retired in 1983 with the rank of major. He is the author of ten previous novels, including The Warbirds, Power Curve, Against All Enemies, Edge of Honor, and The Trojan Sea, all published by Avon Books. Herman currently lives and works in Gold River, a suburb of Sacramento, California.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Like the Texas oil drillers at the heart of the story, Herman's latest military thriller is big and brawny and blustery--showing bulge around the middle, but still carrying its weight reasonably well. RayTex Oil, a small but feisty company out of Dallas, believes it has found a huge oil field off the Cuban coast. The company, however, knows the only way it can stake a claim and drill is if it can topple Fidel Castro and install a government that will cut a deal. Foiling RayTex's plans is Pentagon-based air force fuel expert Lt. Col. Michael Stuart, who gets suspicious after spotting unusual movements of oil exploration ships. He's nonetheless baffled--the Cuban coast has never been considered a potential oil site--until his boss tries to demote him, he is framed for murder and a hired killer tracks him down. He's got personal problems, too: his girlfriend thinks he's a wimp for not standing up to his ex-wife, and his father, hard-nosed former fighter pilot William "Shanker" Stuart, never misses an opportunity to imply how disappointed he is in his son. While Stuart struggles to understand what's happening, RayTex--led by sexy businesswoman L.J. Ellis--is busy fomenting revolution in Havana and deceiving the U.S. government about its intentions. Herman (Edge of Honor, etc.), a retired air force officer, juggles one too many subplots, yet rallies for an exciting finish on the ground and in the skies above Cuba. Both the behavior of Ellis (a tad too promiscuous for a business titan) and Stuart (a bit lily-livered) strain credibility, but Herman's latest has enough thrills and adventure to satisfy his fans. (Feb.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A military thriller about oil exploration and international conspiracy, from the author of Edge of Honor (1999), etc. Divorced Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Michael Stuart hopes to retire in 18 months and take up ocean cruising. Indeed, we first meet him battling a force-five hurricane that drives his sailboat into Cienfuegos, a Cuban harbor. Not a good place to be, since Stuart is a mid-echelon Pentagon technician/bureaucrat who figures out how petroleum, oil, and lubricants are to be delivered in case of a war in two major theaters. Meanwhile, L.J. Ellis, CEO of Ray Tex Oil—a woman who devours rooms by force of pure charisma (she's 38 but looks 28 and wears no bra)—fights off the environmentalists by pretending to join them while she keeps secret her prospecting team's discovery of a deep oil lake bigger than Saudi Arabia. It lies inside the territorial waters of Cuba, a fact that must also be kept secret or Castro will develop the field, drive down world oil prices, and sink Ray Tex as well as all the other oil companies. Or so L.J. pretends until she can get the Cuban concession. Does the presence in Cienfuegos of Air Force oil supply officer Stuart, now digging into US oil exploration, mean that the Pentagon knows about the big oil lake, whose existence is all part of a secret plan L.J. terms"The Trojan Sea"? Soon L.J. is plotting Castro's removal—not by assassination, which would make him a martyr, but by somehow disgracing him. What will the Cubans in Miami with their blocks of Semtex blow up, aside from a Ray Tex fertilizer plant? And will L.J. bed Stuart? Richly rounded characters on a ride as swift and surely aimed as a guided missile.

Book Details

Published
June 2, 2009
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
480
ISBN
9780061956058

More by Richard Herman

Similar books