Een wetenschappelijke doorbraak om de opwarming van de aarde te keren, een reeks onverklaarbare dodelijke ongevallen in Brits-Columbia, een golf internationale incidenten tussen de Verenigde Staten en Canada die in een oorlog dreigt los te barsten. Dirk Pitt en zijn kinderen, Dirk jr. en Summer, geloven dat er een verband bestaat, maar zij weten ook dat hun weinig tijd rest voordat de situatie escaleert. De enige aanwijzing is een zilverachtig mineraal waarvan het spoor terug te volgen is naar een expeditie van lang geleden om de Noordwest Passage te vinden. Maar niemand overleefde die tocht. En als Dirk Pitt en zijn collega Al Giordino niet voorzichtig zijn, wacht hun hetzelfde lot.
Gerrit-Jan van den Berg Book order (chronological)






The drop
- 512 pages
- 18 hours of reading
Harry Bosch is facing the end of the line. He's been put on the DROP - Deferred Retirement Option Plan - and given three years before his retirement is enforced. Seeing the end of the mission coming, he's anxious for cases. He doesn't have to wait long!
The Kill Zone
- 416 pages
- 15 hours of reading
The new white knuckle ride of a thriller from the godfather and authentic voice of the SAS and the military.
Arctic Drift
- 515 pages
- 19 hours of reading
A potential breakthrough discovery to reverse global warming... a series of unexplained sudden deaths in British Columbia... a rash of international incidents between the United States and one of its closest allies that threatens to erupt into an actual shooting war... NUMA director Dirk Pitt and his children, Dirk Jr. and Summer, have reason to believe there's a connection here somewhere, but they also know they have very little time to find it before events escalate out of control. Their only real clue might just be a mysterious silvery mineral traced to a long-ago expedition in search of the fabled Northwest Passage. But no one survived from that doomed mission, captain and crew perished to a man?and if Pitt and his colleague Al Giordino aren't careful, the very same fate may await them.
Tegenaanval
- 317 pages
- 12 hours of reading
Een gewezen SAS-militair meldt zich aan om een Britse journalist te bevrijden die in Libanon door Hezbollah is gekidnapt.
Temperance Brennan - 11: Devil Bones
- 304 pages
- 11 hours of reading
Charlotte, North Carolina. One of the town's oldest neighbourhoods. An underground chamber is exposed in a seedy, dilapidated house with sagging trim and peeling paint... Called to the scene is forensic anthropologist Dr Temperance Brennan. Fighting her claustrophobia, and the unmistakable sweet, fetid odour of rotting flesh, Tempe descends the precariously steep, makeshift wooden steps. What awaits her below is a ritualistic display; slain chickens and a goat - and a skull, ghostly pale, rests on a pedestal, the lower jaw missing, the empty orbits staring back at her. Two cauldrons stand nearby, beads and antlers suspended overhead. Age, race and sex indicators confirm the skull as that of a young, black female - but how did she die, and when? Then, just as Tempe is working to determine the post-mortem interval, another body is uncovered. The corpse is headless, the torso carved with satanic symbols. Led by a preacher-turned-politician, citizen vigilantes blame Devil-worshippers and begin a witch-hunt, intent on revenge.
Atlantis
- 480 pages
- 17 hours of reading
Archaeologist Jack Howard is a brave but cautious man. When he embarked on a new search for buried treasure in the Mediterranean, he knew it was a long shot. When he uncovered a golden disc that spoke of a lost civilization more advanced than any in the ancient world, he started to get excited. But when Jack Howard and his intrepid crew finally got close to uncovering the secrets the sea had held for thousands of years, nothing could have prepared them for what they would find ...
U.S.S. Seawolf
- 350 pages
- 13 hours of reading
Wanneer de nieuwste Amerikaanse onderzeeër in handen van de Chinezen valt, wordt de bemanning gevangengezet op een eilandje; een speciaal opgeleide groep mariniers probeert ze te bevrijden.

