Tuesday, March 15, 2022

"The Doomsday Medallion: A VanOps Thriller"

It's the present moment and the world is on the brink in the new page-turner by Grass Valley novelist Avanti Centrae (avanticentrae.com). One of the characters sums it up: "China just invaded one of Taiwan's outlying islands. And a sixteen-year-old female civilian in France predicted it."

For the teenager, Avril, it's more than a lucky guess. A student of the sixteenth-century seer Nostradamus, who some say predicted the fall of the twin towers, she "received some sort of walnut box from her father as part of her inheritance," a box originally belonging to Nostradamus himself, passed down the family line over the centuries.

Does the box contain Nostradamus' formula for his trances? If the formula falls into the wrong hands, and the invaders can then see the future, including the U.S. response to their aggression, they would be unstoppable.

Enter VanOps, short for "Vanguard Operations," a shadowy CIA organization investigating just such security-threatening "technologies." The team includes twins Will Argones and Maddy Marshall, Maddy's boyfriend "Bear" Thorenson, and Doyle, who has family in Taiwan and who, along with Maddy, belongs to "an ancient sect of royal spies."

The box, it turns out, contains not an herbal formula but a series of cryptic quatrains, a puzzle pointing to a hidden medallion on which all will be revealed. The race is on to decode the poetry and find the object even as sinister forces are bent on the same mission.

"The Doomsday Medallion: A VanOps Thriller" ($17.99 in paperback from Thunder Creek Press; also for Amazon Kindle) is the third in the series, begun with "The Lost Power" and continued with "Solstice Shadows." The new book's deft plotting, propulsive action, and revelations of long-hidden secrets, family and otherwise (who needs Dan Brown?) make for edge-of-the-seat reading.

The quest takes the team to many countries, with threats to life at every turn, but the deepening relationship between Maddy and Bear points to a sweetness in the tale which is underlined by Will, whose wife had died earlier, wondering, as he protects Avril, "what it would have been like to be a dad."

Tender touches, and world-historical implications. Get a clue, and read the book.