Matthew Reilly
Forfatter af De syv underværker
Om forfatteren
Matthew Reilly was born in Sydney, Australia on July 2, 1974. He graduated from St. Aloysius' College and studied law at the University of New South Wales. He writes the Hover Car Racer series and the Jack West Junior series. His other works include Ice Station, Temple, Contest, Area 7, Scarecrow, vis mere and Hell Island. (Bowker Author Biography) vis mindre
Serier
Værker af Matthew Reilly
Complex 13 7 eksemplarer
A Bad Day At Fort Bragg 6 eksemplarer
Altitude Rush 6 eksemplarer
The Mine 5 eksemplarer
The Dead Prince 5 eksemplarer
Time Tours 5 eksemplarer
Mr Einstein's Secretary 4 eksemplarer
The Rock Princess and the Thriller Writer 3 eksemplarer
Mr. Einstein's Secretary 2 eksemplarer
Dd̲ligt lopp 1 eksemplar
Livsfarlig liga 1 eksemplar
Interceptor 1 eksemplar
The abandoned circus 1 eksemplar
Seis Pedras Sagradas 1 eksemplar
Stories 1 eksemplar
Two Lost Mountains 1 eksemplar
Satte nøgleord på
Almen Viden
- Kanonisk navn
- Reilly, Matthew
- Juridisk navn
- Reilly, Matthew John
- Fødselsdato
- 1974-07-02
- Køn
- male
- Nationalitet
- Australia
- Fødested
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Bopæl
- Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Uddannelse
- St Aloysius' College, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
University of New South Wales (LLB) - Erhverv
- author
writer - Relationer
- Reilly, Stephen (brother)
Reilly, Ray (father)
Reilly, Denise (mother)
Freer, Natalie (wife) - Kort biografi
- Matthew John Reilly (2 July 1974) is an Australian action thriller writer. His novels are noted for their fast pace, twisting plots and intense action.
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Statistikker
- Værker
- 58
- Medlemmer
- 17,957
- Popularitet
- #1,224
- Vurdering
- 3.7
- Anmeldelser
- 478
- ISBN
- 725
- Sprog
- 17
- Udvalgt
- 60
**minor spoilers ahead**
Once again, Matthew Reilly masterfully puts reimagines ancient myth, legend and history, and crafts it into an action thriller that barely gives you time to take a breath. There really are some incredible highs and lows, both literally and figuratively, and although there are a few reflective breaks in the middle, mostly in the form of flashbacks or catch-ups, the duration of the plot can be measured in hours, if not minutes. It’s almost ironic that the one of the villains’ masterful schemes involves putting entire cities to sleep, because it seems like Jack West and his team just never get, nor indeed need, any!
I think it became obvious to me quite early on that though the Supreme Labyrinth was the objective everyone was gunning for, it wasn’t going to be the focal point of this book, so in many ways this was just ‘how everyone got to the Labyrinth’. Which is fine - to quote another series I’m currently reading, Journey before Destination - but it does make it the second book in a row where there’s not a real conclusion. I’m glad Matthew Reilly addresses this in his interview and calls it essentially a three-part story leading to the Omega Event, and it gives him more of an opportunity to do it justice.
All in all, the The Two Lost Mountains manages to lay the groundwork for the grand finale of the series by really bringing out the desperation but also the determination of Jack and his team. With so many players in the game and literally the entire universe at stake, I can’t wait to see how it all wraps up.… (mere)