The Camel Club by David Baldacci Paperback Book

Details

Rent The Camel Club

Author: David Baldacci

Format: Quality Paperback, Unabridged-CD, Paperback, Abridged-CD

Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

Published: Sep 2014

Genre: Fiction - Espionage

Retail Price: $16.99

Synopsis

The man known as Oliver Stone has no official past. He spends most days camped opposite the White House, hoping to expose corruption wherever he finds it. But the stakes are raised when he and his friends, a group of conspiracy theorist misfits known as The Camel Club, accidentally witness the murder of an intelligence analyst. Especially when the authorities are seemingly happy to write it off as a suicide. For Secret Service agent Alex Ford, monitoring the 'investigation', the suicide verdict doesn't ring true. As punishment for sticking his nose where it doesn't belong, he is reassigned to bodyguard duties. His abilities are tested to the limit when he is sent to protect the President during a visit to his hometown, where a terrorist cell has spent months plotting an event that will shake the world. Meanwhile, America's powerful intelligence chief Carter Gray is unnerved when he glimpses the face of an old acquaintance in Arlington Cemetery - but it is the face of a man supposedly long dead...And as The Camel Club is poised to expose a conspiracy that reaches into the heart of Washington's highly secretive corridors of power, Alex Ford finds out that his worst nightmare is about to happen. ..

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Reviews

BookLender review by Angelita on 2007-04-24 09:44:32

I found this book a little confusing with the refernces to arab culture and the names a little hard to remember who was who. Near the end it picked up with lots of action and predictable conclusions.

BookLender review by Alexander on 2008-09-20 11:29:16

The only good thing that I can say about this book is that the narrator, Jonathan Davis, did a decent job with moronic dialog and sophmoric descriptions.  Camel Club could have been much, much shorter.  If you must listen to or read this book, do yourself a favor and get the abridged version.  My best advice though, is that if you have a highschool education or higher, avoid this book.  This is the first and last Baldacci book that I will every read/listen to.  His research and therefore understanding of the subject he writes about in this book is sub-par.  Baldacci, for instance, doesn't know the difference between Agent and Officer.  A simple distincion if you've done ample research.  The dialog between the characters is hammy and misguided.  I struggled through this book until the last CD, hoping that the end would do some sort of justice to having listened to this trife.  But I was not so fortunate, Baldacci's ending to Camel Club was just as horrible as the reast of the book.  I couldn't even listen to the last 2 or 3 tracks.If you like this book and think that it is well done, and/or smart, please rethink this because Baldacci does a serious disservice to those who protect this country.  Bottom line, this book is terrible.

BookLender review by Morton on 2007-09-14 02:08:46

I have read Baldaccci's previous books starting with Absolute Power and while his plots were always clever, his characters seemed more mechanical than real. The Camel Club was every bit as well plotted as the earlier novels, but here is characters actually did spring to life and. addition to the high tension that made me turn the pages faster and faster as the threatened doomsday finish aproached, there was a good bit of sly humor. I highly recomend it.