Stuart Aken's Reviews > Treasure of Khan

Treasure of Khan by Clive Cussler
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did not like it

As a writer, I don’t read in the same way as a general reader, so my comments here may not be as helpful as they might otherwise be. Clive Cussler is, of course, a well-known thriller writer with a large number of sales to his name. If Treasure of Khan is representative of his style, however, I have to ask the simple question; why?

In common with most people these days, I have a limited amount of time, and my reading choices are therefore important: I’ve no desire to spend time reading something which is poorly written, when there’s such a wealth of well-written work out there. This book is supposed to be a thriller. The genre has the reputation of racing the reader through events, using action to drive interest. Character is, understandably, a less vital part of such books and I took up this book knowing such would be the case.

The story starts in 13th century Japan, moves in the next chapter to China during its war with Japan and then travels to Siberia in 2007. In 3 chapters we have travelled a vast region of an area with which most readers have no connection and little knowledge. There’s no apparent link between the events described in these opening chapters, but, hey, this is supposed to be an adventure story and, eventually, the back story will hopefully appear relevant. I’ll never know, however, because, although the action has already started by this point, I’ve lost all interest. I’m not hooked. I don’t care about what might or might not happen next. I have better things to do than invest more time in this particular pot-boiler.

There will be Cussler fans who will, no doubt, accuse me of blindness or some unspecified bias. But the simple fact is that this thriller failed to thrill, in any sense of the word. I was bored by the multitude of apparently unlinked facts, uninterested in any of the characters, confused by the apparent lack of any actual story thread and unmoved by the action scenes. These, the very essence of the thriller, were tedious and written in a style more suited to a factual report than to the presentation of exciting fiction.

I expected the characters to be two-dimensional, but not as cardboard as I found them. I expected to be moved to the edge of my seat and not bored into lethargy and total indifference, as I was. In defence of Cussler, I gather this is the umpteenth volume in a series starring the same major character; that, however, doesn’t excuse inadequate characterisation for those new to the series. Certainly, on the evidence of this book, I shan’t waste my time picking up another by the same author.

Ironically, this was one of four novels enclosed in a single volume I received free as a sampler from a book club. The other three books were excellent, so this piece stood out like the proverbial thumb; sore and in need of amputation.

So, sorry Cussler fans, I shan’t be joining your ranks. I hope you enjoy your fiction by this author but I seriously hope he, in turn, rewards your devotion by producing books of a far better quality than I found in Treasure of Khan. Unless someone tells me, I shall never know what that treasure was, and, to tell the truth, I really couldn’t care less. Need I say more?
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Reading Progress

October 31, 2011 – Shelved
July 25, 2012 – Started Reading
August 1, 2012 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-6 of 6 (6 new)

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Logan I'm nearly finished with the audio book and felt the same way. I was actually intrigued a bit by the part with Kublai Kahn and the discovery of the island, but then that "thread" just seemed abandoned and a new one started with some archaeologist. I wasn't sure how it was supposed to be connected (they were talking about the tomb of Genghis, not Kublai) but after a bit I got on board and was looking forward to discovering the lost tomb from the map! Then that thread was dropped too and now we spend a relatively boring couple of chapters describing the geography of a lake, and a tsunami.

And almost completely through the book I'm just not interested in any of it. And still not sure how it all ties together or why the backstory was even necessary.


Stuart Aken So, it wasn't just me, Logan? I think it' such a shame when best-selling authors do this sort of disservice to their readers, especially when there are so many very good undiscovered writers out there.
Thanks for your comment.


Joshua Girardini Man, I wish i would have headed your warning. After reading this review I dismissed it, I just finished listening to half of the audio book and had to stop. The story just didn't work for me and there wasn't really much thrill at all.


Stuart Aken Reluctant as I am to give poor reviews, I feel it's sensible for all of us to pass on our findings so that new readrers can have at least some warning of what to expect.
I'm not surprised you had the same reaction to this poor novel as Logan and I, just sorry you were tempted by the author's reputation to buy it!
Better luck with your next purchase.


Neil Hi, Stuart! I enjoyed reading your review. His earlier books are better, to be honest. I would say, after Shockwave, his books begin to go downhill, and most of his books co-written with his son are extremely hit-and-miss, and I would not call any of those 'thrillers.' Personally, my favorite is Treasure, then maybe Night Probe! or Vixen 03, then Raise the Titanic!, then a tie between Sahara and Dragon. I did like Shockwave, too. His earlier books are, by-and-large, are his 'best' works, though.


Stuart Aken Neil wrote: "Hi, Stuart! I enjoyed reading your review. His earlier books are better, to be honest. I would say, after Shockwave, his books begin to go downhill, and most of his books co-written with his son ar..."

Thanks, Neil. Clearly he's written something worth reading, otherwise you wouldn't have spent time on these books. Good to know his reputation is at least based on some good stuff in the past. It's a shame when authors, rather like some iconic singers, don't recognise they've spent their best and it might be better to retire from the scene rather than impose their failing talents on the public!


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