Ark Angel

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Ark Angel
Anthony Horowitz Arkangel Cover.JPG
First edition cover
AuthorAnthony Horowitz
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SeriesAlex Rider series
GenreAdventure, Spy novel, thriller novel
PublisherPuffin Books
Publication date
1 April 2005
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages326
ISBN0-7445-8324-1 (first edition, paperback)
OCLC58984041
LC ClassPZ7.H7875 Ar 2005
Preceded byScorpia 
Followed bySnakehead 

Ark Angel is the sixth book in the Alex Rider series written by British author Anthony Horowitz. The novel is a spy thriller which follows the attempt by the title character, Alex Rider, to foil the plot of a Russian billionaire.

The book was released in the United Kingdom on 1 April 2005[1] and in the United States on 20 April 2006.[2] Initial reviews of the book were positive.

Plot[]

Maximilian Webber, a former SAS , gives a speech denouncing an extreme eco-terrorist organisation known as Force Three. After the speech, he is contacted by an unknown man who declares him an enemy of Force Three. The phone explodes, killing him.

Meanwhile, Alex Rider is recuperating in a hospital after being shot at the end of his previous mission. He meets Paul Drevin, the son of a Russian billionaire Nikolei Drevin. One night, four men break into the hospital and attempt to kidnap Paul, but Alex manages to overpower them. However, he is captured by Kaspar, the leader, and imprisoned in an abandoned building where the men reveal themselves as members of Force Three. The men set fire to the building after realising that Alex deliberately foiled their plan. Alex escapes from the fire by tightrope walking to an adjacent building, and returns to the hospital, where he is debriefed by John Crawley, MI6 Chief of Staff, and later discharged. Back home, Nikolei Drevin invites Alex to stay with him for two weeks as thanks for preventing his son's kidnapping. As Alex's doctor has recommended that he take a holiday, he accepts.

Alex meets Drevin and his jobsworth assistant, Tamara Knight, at a hotel where Drevin is holding a press conference about his space project, Ark Angel; it is set to be the first-ever space hotel. Alex is treated well by Drevin, but starts suspecting him after realizing that Paul had been given no protection before the Force Three attack, despite claims of always being "a target". Stumbling into Drevin's private study, Alex discovers that Drevin owns the building where Alex was interrogated and nearly killed by Force Three. The following day, Alex participates in a race on Drevin’s private go-kart track; Alex beats Drevin when the man attempts to cheat, revealing his hatred of losing. Later, Alex watches a football match at Stamford Bridge with the home team, Chelsea, up against a team owned by Drevin, Stratford East, which loses. Alex encounters Force Three members giving a medal to the team captain who missed the final penalty, and is briefly taken by one of the Force Three men, but manages to get away. Alex tells Tamara Knight about Force Three, but the footballer is killed when the medal, made of caesium, catches fire in the shower.

Drevin, Tamara, Alex and Paul fly to New York City, but Alex is apprehended at the airport by an immigration official who claims that his passport is expired. This turns out to be a ruse by the CIA to bring Alex to Joe Byrne, the chief of the CIA. Byrne reveals that the CIA have investigated Drevin's wealth and found it to be attained through underworld contacts; they plan to arrest him for money laundering. Worried that Drevin will slip away, Byrne assigns Alex to report to him if he sees anything amiss at Flamingo Bay, Drevin's private island, from where Ark Angel rockets are launched. Smithers, the gadget master at MI6, arrives and provides Alex with gadgets, including mosquito repellent that attracts all manner of insects, an asthma inhaler that can be used as a grenade or a knockout gas dispenser, and an iPod that allows him to listen to phone calls. On Flamingo Bay, Alex intercepts a phone call from Drevin, who will be meeting someone the following night. Later, however, Drevin finds out about Alex's identity from the security chief, Magnus Payne, and decides to have him killed by sending him to dive into a shipwreck, in which he is locked in. Right when Alex is about to run out of air, Tamara appears and saves him, revealing that she has been Joe Byrne's inside man all along. The two go undercover to investigate Drevin's meeting, and see him meeting with Force Three, but are caught when Tamara accidentally sets off an alarm.

Alex is brought to Drevin, who reveals his intention to destroy Ark Angel with a bomb and send its wreckage crashing down on the Pentagon in Washington D.C. As the project has gone over budget and Drevin stands to lose money if he continues to finance it, he plans to recoup his financial losses with a large insurance payout from the station's destruction, while at the same time destroying the CIA's evidence of his criminal activities. Force Three are revealed to be hired hands, formed to act as scapegoats for Ark Angel's destruction. Payne then kills all members of Force Three, and reveals himself to be Kaspar, the leader of Force Three, with a tattoo of a globe on his head. Alex and Tamara are imprisoned, but Alex escapes and meets the CIA team stationed in Barbados, but the Atlas rocket with the bomb launches off to Ark Angel. The CIA team storm Flamingo Island and Drevin attempts to shoot Alex in the chaos, but Paul gets hit instead. Drevin leaves Paul and tries to escape, but his plane crashes, killing him instantly.

As there is no way to stop the bomb on the ground, Alex is to travel up to Ark Angel in a second rocket to deal with it manually. He encounters Kaspar aboard Ark Angel but manages to overpower him using the effects of zero-gravity and the sun, and Kaspar is stabbed to death by his own knife. Alex then moves the bomb away so that the wreckage from the detonation will simply break up and disintegrate. Ark Angel explodes and Alex falls back to Earth, landing a hundred miles off the coast of Australia.

Characters[]

Reception[]

Philip Ardagh at The Guardian gave Ark Angel a positive review, stating "It's perfectly pitched at its readership. Ark Angel reads the way a children's thriller should read" and "This is a welcome new addition [to the series]."[3]

References[]

  1. ^ "Ark Angel announced". Anthony Horowitz. Archived from the original on 2009-02-25. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  2. ^ "Ark Angel in the USA". Anthony Horowitz news. February 2006. Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  3. ^ Philip Ardagh (9 April 2005). "Alex rides again". The Guardian. Retrieved 2009-04-07.

External links[]

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