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A sampling of our books by Clive Cussler

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Shock Wave (Dirk Pitt Adventure Ser.)
by Cussler, Clive

$6.00


New York, NY, U.S.A.: Simon & Schuster Trade. 1996. F First Edition. H Hard Cover. Near Fine/Near Fine. A nice hardcover rea... [more information]



Shock Wave (Dirk Pitt Adventure Ser.)
by Cussler, Clive

$7.20


New York, NY, U.S.A.: Simon & Schuster Trade. 1996. F First Edition. H Hard Cover. Near Fine/Near Fine DJ. A nearly flawless... [more information]



The Sea Hunters: True Adventures With Famous Shipwrecks
by Cussler, Clive

$3.50


New York: Pocket Star Books, 1997. First Thus. paperback. Very Good/No Jacket. Book shows moderate shelf wear, creasing to s... [more information]



CYCLOPS
by Cussler, Clive

$3.50


Pocket Books. G+ 1988. Stated 1st Printing. Paperback. Bright, glossy cover, clean tight pages. Light spine creases, very light ... [more information]



Shock Wave
by Cussler, Clive

$4.50


New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996. First Edition. Hardcover. Near Fine/Very Good. Book has light shelfwear, else fine. D... [more information]



Clive Cussler

(1931- )
Clive Cussler (born July 15, 1931 in Alhambra, California) is an American adventure novelist. His most famous creation is marine engineer, government agent, and adventurer Dirk Pitt.

Cussler is the father of Dirk Cussler, who co-wrote Black Wind (2004).

Writing
The first two Pitt novels, The Mediterranean Caper and Iceberg, were relatively conventional maritime thrillers. The third, Raise the Titanic!, made Cussler's reputation and established the pattern that subsequent Pitt novels would follow: A blend of high adventure and high technology, generally involving megalomaniacal villains, lost ships, and sunken treasure.

Cussler's novels, like those of Michael Crichton are examples of techno-thrillers that do not use military plots and settings. Where Crichton strives for scrupulous realism, however, Cussler prefers fantastic spectacles and outlandish plot devices. The Pitt novels, in particular, have the anything-goes quality of the James Bond or Indiana Jones movies, while also sometimes borrowing from Alistair MacLean's novels. Pitt himself is a two-dimensional, larger-than-life hero reminiscent of Doc Savage and other characters from pulp magazines.

Life Imitating Art
As an underwater explorer, Cussler has discovered more than 60 shipwreck sites and has written non-fiction books about his findings. He is also the founder of the National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA), a non-profit organization with the same name as the fictional government agency that employs Dirk Pitt. Cussler owns a large collection of classic cars, several of which (driven by Pitt) appear in his novels.

In what started as a joke in the novel Dragon, and that Cussler expected his editor to remove, he now often writes himself into his books, at first as simple cameos, but later as something of a deus ex machina, providing the novel's protagonists with an essential bit of assistance.

Art Imitating Death
His 2001 novel Valhalla Rising featured a sci-fi Viking mythology set in Tarrytown and other locations of the Hudson River Valley of Westchester County, New York. Valhalla, New York is famous for its sea of graveyards near Kensico where many famous personalities are buried. The name of the community came from a 19th Century fan of Richard Wagner and her own interest in Norse mythology. In 1994, Mark Guglielmo drew attention to the connection between Vikings and Valhalla, when he murdered his wife in Florida and then disposed of her bisected corpse twenty miles apart in the Hudson River and at a location near Bedford, while attempting to imitate portions of a Viking funeral.

Cinematization
The first attempt to film one of Cussler's novels — Raise The Titanic! (1980) — was a critical and commercial failure. Its failure was widely attributed to a weak script and the casting of Richard Jordan as Pitt.

Paramount Pictures released Sahara on April 8, 2005, starring Matthew McConaughey as Dirk Pitt, Steve Zahn as Al Giordino, William H. Macy as Admiral Sandecker, and Penelope Cruz as Eva Rojas. Cussler and the studio have filed lawsuits against each other in a disagreement over whether the film departs too severely from the novel.