The Devil Colony: A Sigma Force Novel
By
James Rollins
Reviewed by
Blair Dee Hodges
On
6/28/2011
William Morrow (HarperCollins), 2011
Hardcover:
480 pages
ISBN-10: 0-06-178478-8
ISBN-13: 978-0-06-178478-1
Binding:
Price: $27.99
Reviewed by Blair Dee Hodges for the Association for Mormon Letters
Deep in the sub-basement of the Smithsonian in Washington D.C. a
top-secret military organization called SIGMA Force plans covert
operations for the protection of the United States. SIGMA Force, led by
Painter Crowe, consists of scientist/soldier/spies who counter
technological and conspiratorial threats to the US. Author James Rollins
conceived of the super-secret team for his SIGMA Force novel series.
(See http://www.jamesrollins.com/books/view/31.)
The Devil Colony is the seventh book of the series, a mix between the
television series 24 and the National Treasure movies. Rollins tells
the story of a conspiracy dating back to the founding of the United
States when American Indian groups and Thomas Jefferson are said to have
anticipated the inclusion of a fourteenth colony in the union. The plan
was disrupted, maps and codes were hidden in the seal of the United
States, buffalo skulls, and mysterious metallic plates were buried in
the earth. The colony itself was lost, which was fortunate since it
houses an ancient technology which can threaten the existence of the
entire planet. Yes, literally the entire planet, should its fuse be
accidentally lit. Current advances in nanotechnology aren't so current
after all.
A good portion of the book takes place in Utah, where a hidden cave
contains the bodies of an ancient people who committed mass suicide to
bury knowledge of a deadly technology. These light-skinned victims with
their Hebrew-esque records catch the attention of Hank Kanosh, a BYU
anthropologist and American Indian Mormon who teams up with SIGMA Force
to solve the mystery of this cave. The further the team explores the
less far-fetched Hank's thoughts about Israelites in ancient America
appear. (Although, Hank mistakenly refers to the translator of the Book
of Mormon as "John Smith," p. 298. See also pp. 58 and 476 where
"Joseph" and "John" are used interchangeably.) In the after-the-story
"Truth or Fiction" section included in the book, Rollins humorously
apologizes for blowing a hole in the Underground Physics Research
Laboratory of the Eyring Science Center at BYU (479).
As in most spy novels, all the women are sexy, all the men are brilliant
—even the bulky enforcer types. Rollins combines science, history, and
religion throughout his fast-paced, though pretty far-fetched story,
which jumps from Washington D.C. to Japan, Iceland, Kentucky, Utah and
back to colonial America on the Lewis and Clark trail. There are plenty
of gun fights, an orca whale attack, volcanic eruptions, buried golden
plates, a Fort Knox attack, helicopter hijacking, grave robbing, melting
islands, hot lava, and elderly dementia. If you're into early American
and Mormon History without being meticulously picky or averse to
fictionalization, and you like a gripping spy novel and don't mind a few
cheesy one-liners, occasional melodramatics, a couple of f-bombs, and
exploding skulls and brain matter, The Devil Colony will make great
summer reading.
CAUTION: At least two fictional Mormons are maimed in the narrative of
this novel!
Copyright
2011