Afghan President Hamid Karzai, center, arrives for a group photo for an ambassadors and consuls general conference in Kabul, Afghanistan, Saturday, Dec. 15, 2012. Afghan President Hamid Karzai said Saturday that the U.S. and NATO troops transferring security to Afghan forces should leave Afghan villages as soon as possible and pull back to their bases. (AP Photo/Ahmad Jamshid)
Review: 'The Leviathan Effect' disappoints
Published: 03:49:37 PM, Tue 19 March 2013 UTC
"The Leviathan Effect" (Soho), by James Lilliefors
James Lilliefors ponders weather manipulation and its potential use as a weapon in his new thriller, "The Leviathan Effect."
Homeland Security Secretary Catherine Blaine receives a frightening email from a person named Janus warning her that three recent "natural disasters" — a tsunami, a hurricane and an earthquake — were manufactured. The email says that unless Blaine agrees to a series of demands, the next catastrophic event will hit the United States — and devastate the country.
As she works with the president and his Cabinet to neutralize the threat, a storm begins to brew off the East Coast.
Lilliefors sells the idea of weather manipulation as a realistic concept, but the rest of the novel suffers from a lack of interesting characters. If you don't care what happens to the people involved, why worry about whether they're going to be able to avert disaster? A subplot involving the murder of several scientists feels like an afterthought. And the ambiguous ending doesn't help much either.
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