Much like S.A. Sidor’s The Institute for Singular Antiquities series, Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire plays off the same themes as the Indiana Jones, The Mummy, Hellboy, and Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow films have done for the last forty years. I enjoyed this book a bit more than Sidor’s, but they certainly have a lot of similarities. I was a bit surprised that author Dan Hanks opened the book in 1945 with the super secret government organization seeking out Sam Moxley, and then jump to 1952 and we hear only tidbits of her time with The Nine. I’m curious if a follow-up book (no cliffhanger, but it does set up a sequel) or prequel will deal with her seven years she spent with this clandestine establishment. Yes, hints are dropped throughout, but now I kind of want to hear that story.
"It is likely I will die next to a pile of books I was meaning to read.” -Lemony Snickett
17 January 2021
Books: Captain Moxley and the Embers of the Empire By Dan Hanks
"An ex-Spitfire pilot is dragged into a race against a shadowy government
agency to unlock the secrets of the lost empire of Atlantis. In post-war
1952, the good guys are supposed to have won. But not everything is as it seems
when ex-Spitfire pilot Captain Samantha Moxley is dragged into a fight against
the shadowy US government agency she used to work for. Now, with former Nazis
and otherworldly monsters on her trail, Captain Samantha Moxley is forced into
protecting her archaeologist sister in a race to retrieve two ancient keys that
will unlock the secrets of a long-lost empire - to ensure a civilization-destroying
weapon doesn't fall into the wrong hands. But what will she have to sacrifice
to save the world?
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