Start by marking “The Hot Zone (Rainshadow, #3; Ghost Hunters, #11)” as Want to Read: Error rating book. So much that I read it through the night and suffered a terrible book hangover. Tonight, the National Geographic Channel will begin airing its six-part adaptation of Richard Preston’s book, The Hot Zone, which covered the … No I will take a break and not chortle as I write this. Sedona is a Gatekeeper, she can open and close the gates of The Underworld. I highly recommend it to readers who prefer lite rather than dark fantasy, with fun-hearted action and adventure. The author of over 40 consecutive New York Times bestsellers, JAYNE ANN KRENTZ writes romantic-suspense, often with a psychic and paranormal twist, in three different worlds: Contemporary (as Jayne Ann Krentz), historical (as Amanda Quick) and futuristic (as Jayne Castle). One of the most chilling exchanges in National Geographic’s miniseries The Hot Zone, based on Richard Preston’s best-selling book of the same name, comes the midst of tracking down the cause of a 1976 outbreak of Ebola in Zaire. In Hot Zone, the third of the Rainshadow Island series, we meet Lyle, the newest addition to the dust bunny cast. It had some issues that keep it from being great, but I wasn’t bored, which is more than I can say for some of JAK’s books. Exclusive: ‘Father of the Bride’ Reboot with Latinx Cast in the Works at Warner Bros. ‘American Murder’ Review: Netflix’s Grim, Vital Documentary Exposes the Lies of Our Online Lives, ‘Sound of Metal’ Trailer Shows Riz Ahmed Losing His Hearing in One of the Year’s…. Halloween on Rainshadow Island with Lyle the dust-bunny, and friends. 290 Stimson Ave. The 6-episode The Hot Zone (which will run over three consecutive nights) is primarily focused on a 1989 outbreak of what would become know as Ebola Reston, which was first discovered in monkeys in a DC-area facility and misdiagnosed as Simian Hemorrhagic Fever. Jayne Ann Krentz is her contemporary (some of which is also paranormal) pen name under which she has or currently is writing the following series: Eclipse Bay, Arcane, and Dark Legacy. Taking a change from the suspense field I read The Hot Zone. Potomac Books, Lincoln, Nebraska, 2020, 336 pages.
I went into this book blindly, with no prior knowledge of this author, series, or the world she created.
Some of the facts surrounding the case certainly point to a possible insider job, but the author opines that while the means were possible, it would have taken specialized equipment and other specialized personnel to transform anthrax into a powder. This is not my normal genre preference and although I liked it, I didn't love it. Jayne Castle is her futuristic (with paranormal) pen name under which she is writing the Harmony/Rainshadow series.