
Note: Comments may contain spoilers. Andrew Salmon
This is one of the first Docs I read and it is still one of my favorites. Great action, fast pacing and an interesting mystery. What Doc's all about! - | - September 30, 2002 02:24 PM
Scott Kimball
I hate to nitpick, because I think that each Doc Story has to be enjoyed as a whole, and inevitably that means ignoring or just accepting parts that are ridiculous, incongruous, or totally unbeleivable. In The Man Who Shook The Earth, I could accept the idea of the evil mastermind developing the technology to create earthquakes, but the idea that he could cause earthquakes so accurate that they would kill certain individuals was a bit of a stretch. Otherwise, no complaints about this one... lots of fun. - | - August 24, 2003 01:29 AM
Paul Cook
This is one of the better early Docs with a great Bama cover (with one or two too many cracks in the ground). But this book got me through Sophomore Chemistry when it came out. I recommend it. - | - April 29, 2005 12:27 AM
Lee Dorrance
A great early thriller in Doc's career with a very interesting plot as Doc thwarts the "certain European nation getting ready for war" the first of many times to come. - | - December 5, 2005 11:51 AM
Mark Carpenter
After reading two Donovan-ghosted Doc books in a row (the wretched "Haunted Ocean" and "Cold Death"), it was a pleasure to settle in and savor a true Dent classic like "The Man Who Shook the Earth." What can you say? Dent just knew how to write. HIs characters were meatier, his plots were more interesting, his prose was tighter and he always added cool little extras that just made his books more fun to read. In this one, I love how Doc actually did some skywriting to warn the villain that he'd get caught in his own trap.
I give this one a solid "A." Nobody did it like Dent. - | - April 13, 2006 09:38 AM
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