Book Review: The Solomon Effect by C.S. Graham

Human history is interwoven the theme of the supernatural and of those who searched for ways to harness its power. Just do a Google search for “ancient magic texts” and you'll find long-forgotten volumes, testimony to the past attempts to harness the power of the invisible world. But the hopes of tapping into the hidden forces of magic did not die with the age of science. During the Cold War both the United States and the Soviet Union are said to have invested money and brain power into attempts at figuring out how to harness these mysterious forces.

That such forces are real and that the secret U.S. program was more than fantasy is the assumption behind the series of thrillers by C.S. Graham. The Solomon Effect continues the story of October Guiness, a remote viewer who first made her appearance in The Archangel Project, as she faces a conspiracy that aims to bring back the lost Nazi technologies of death in order to wipe out millions.

Guiness is activated when her unit is tasked, by no less than the vice-president himself, with finding the location of a vanished Nazi submarine U-114, believed to be part of a terrorist plot. A remote viewing session turns up a lead — Kalinigrad, the isolated Russian enclave on the Baltic coast, as the sub's location. But October is concerned that her lead will not be fully exploited by whoever the CIA decides to send into the field. To assure that they get as much out of it as possible, she proposes going into Kaliningrad herself. She ends up going with Jax Alexander, master spy, at her side.

October and Jax arrive to a warm welcome from a “friend” who just happens to be a Russian FSB colonel. The Russian spy insists on accompanying the two to their destination. But the information about the sub that October and Jax were originally given turns out to be false, for the mysterious sub seems to have been carrying something much more dangerous than they expected. Before the duo have a chance to thoroughly examine the sub, the minions of a shadowy Major blow up the submarine. Guiness and Alexander find themselves on the run from the Major's men.

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  • The Solomon Effect The Solomon Effect

    A German U-boat lost in the final days of the Second World War rested silent and dead in the deep waters off the Russian coast for more than half a century—carrying a cargo too terrifying to contemplate. ...

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