Clive Cussler, Grandmaster of Adventure, dies at 88 - His books were of manly men doing manly things and hooking up with dangerous women. And explosions. And cool cars.

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LegoTugboat

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Famed novelist Clive Cussler whose book Sahara was turned into a blockbuster film starring Matthew McConaughey dies, aged 88


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Novelist Clive Cussler, whose book Sahara was turned into a blockbuster movie starring Matthew McConaughey, has died. He was 88.
Cussler's wife, Janet Horvath, shared the news of her husband's death on his Twitter account Wednesday afternoon.
'It is with a heavy heart that I share the sad news that my husband Clive passed away Mon,' Horvath wrote.

'It has been a privilege to share in his life. I want to thank you his fans & friends for all the support. He was the kindest most gentle man I ever met. I know, his adventures will continue.'
Her emotional tweet was accompanied by a photo of them driving in one of their cars.
Horvath didn't disclose the cause of death.

Fans immediately expressed their love for the 'gifted storyteller' who wrote more than two dozen novels, including his 1992 adventure story, Sahara.
Sahara was turned into a feature film in 2005, starring McConaughey, Steve Zahn and Penélope Cruz.
The book is one of Cussler's famed Dirk Pitt novels that follows Pitt through the African desert in search of a ship with treasure rumored to have vanished long ago.

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Sahara grossed $122million at the time and it became the highest-grossing movie adapted from Cussler's novels.
His 1976 adventure novel, Raise the Titanic, also one of his Dirk Pitt books, became a movie in 1980. It grossed $7million.
Dirk is also the name of Cussler's son, who helped the author write several of his books, including Celtic Empire (2019), Odessa Sea (2016) and Havana Storm (2014).

Cussler, who was born in Aurora, Illinois, was dubbed the 'Grand Master of Adventure' early on in his career.
He enlisted in the Air Force during the Korean War where he served as an aircraft mechanic and flight engineer in the Military Air Transport Service.

Cussler began writing in 1965 and published his first novel, The Mediterranean Caper, featuring the character Dirk Pitt in 1973.
In 1996, he released his first piece of non-fiction, The Sea Hunters. The Board of Governors of the Maritime College, State University of New York later considered The Sea Hunters in lieu of a Ph.D. thesis and awarded Cussler a Doctor of Letters degree in May of 1997.
It was the first time since the college was founded in 1874 that such a degree was bestowed.

Cussler also founded the National Underwater & Marine Agency, (NUMA) a nonprofit organization that dedicates itself to American maritime and naval history.
After the organization was established, Cussler and his crew of marine experts and volunteers discovered more than 60 historically significant underwater wreck sites.
Among their discoveries was the C.S.S. Hunley, the first submarine to sink a ship in battle and the U-20, the U-boat that sank the Lusitania.

Cussler was also a classic automobile collector.
He established the Cussler Museum in Colorado that's dedicated to the preservation of rare and vintage automobiles from all over the world.
Cussler, who has sold more than 100 million books throughout his career, was married for nearly 50 years to his first wife, Barbara Knight. She died in 2003.

Together Cussler and Knight had three children, Dirk, Dayna and Teri.
Cussler is survived by his second wife, Janet, and his three children.
 

millais

The Yellow Rose of Victoria, Texas
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He did some remarkable things for American marine archaeology. He was not a scholarly academic of the traditional mold in that field, but at least he was pretty conscientious about preservation of the shipwrecks he found and not a reckless treasure hunter.

His books are pretty fun too, I guess.
 

RA-5C Vigilante

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Aw that sucks. I was one of five people on the planet who enjoyed the movie adaption of Sahara. Yeah it was dumb, but it was one of my favorites growing up, and any movie that has any focus on Civil War ironclads is good in my book.

RIP, I guess God needed another thriller writer because Clancy started ghostwriting. Literally.
 

ddlloo

kiwifarms.net
Read a bunch of the Dirk Pitt novels as a young teen (My dad bought all of his books up until Cussler started to co-write them and apparently the quality went down, though he kept buying the Dirk Pitt ones), and found them quite enjoyable. Ocean adventures and antique cars have never been my cup of tea, but even without the appreciation for those I was still able to enjoy his books. Always appreciated the fact that he walked the walk and was actually an accomplished diver and collector himself. Seemed like one of the good types that didn't just rest on their laurels and live a millionaire's life in between writing books, but also strove to do some good (and interesting!) too.

Going to text my Dad about this actually, his books were one of the first interests we shared as I grew up.
 

Dorsia.Reservation

Dorsia's Dixie Stampede & Plantation Wedding Venue
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I loved Raise the Titanic as a kid.

And as another Kiwi said, it is something I shared with my father and for me that was a rarity.

Rest in peace, Mr. Cussler.
 

Some Manajerk

kiwifarms.net
Aww man, these last few years have seen a ton of my favorite authors pass away. I loved his books, though me and my dad tend to get into good-natured arguments over which of the books are mine and which ones i borrowed from him and have "forgotten" to return.
 

3119967d0c

"a brain" - @REGENDarySumanai
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I wanted to read one of his books. I never got the chance.
Just make sure to avoid anything written after the year 2000 or so, I don't think he's written in at least that long. Better things to do to be fair.
 

LegoTugboat

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No, he did a few after 2000. I think the first one with Dirk Cussler helping to write was Black Wind in 2004. Thankfully, it's mentioned on the covers if it was written by just him, or by him with someone else.

For newcomers, I'd suggest a few books to read. Raise the Titanic's certainly most of the iconic ones, but note that it was written before it was discovered that the Titanic broke in two while sinking.

Sahara and Dragon are also good, and Arctic Drift is also worth reading in the Dirk Pitt series.

The Oregon series is also worth reading, just because it's basically this glorious beautiful modern warship disguised as a crappy, leaky, shitsmelling cargo ship.

Plague Ship's a very nice one to read there, as well as Skeleton Coast.

I couldn't really get into the other series though, so I can't recommend much there. You should be able to pick up a lot of his older work from used/second hand stores fairly easily.
 

Dom Cruise

I'll fucking Mega your ass, bitch!
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That's a shame.

I've been curious about his work for a while but there's such a large number of books it's hard to know where to begin.


No, he did a few after 2000. I think the first one with Dirk Cussler helping to write was Black Wind in 2004. Thankfully, it's mentioned on the covers if it was written by just him, or by him with someone else.

For newcomers, I'd suggest a few books to read. Raise the Titanic's certainly most of the iconic ones, but note that it was written before it was discovered that the Titanic broke in two while sinking.

Sahara and Dragon are also good, and Arctic Drift is also worth reading in the Dirk Pitt series.

The Oregon series is also worth reading, just because it's basically this glorious beautiful modern warship disguised as a crappy, leaky, shitsmelling cargo ship.

Plague Ship's a very nice one to read there, as well as Skeleton Coast.

I couldn't really get into the other series though, so I can't recommend much there. You should be able to pick up a lot of his older work from used/second hand stores fairly easily.

Any other works of his you've read that you'd recommend?
 

millais

The Yellow Rose of Victoria, Texas
True & Honest Fan
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That's a shame.

I've been curious about his work for a while but there's such a large number of books it's hard to know where to begin.




Any other works of his you've read that you'd recommend?
You can start pretty much anywhere with his "Dirk Pitt" series. They are structured very similarly to the James Bond novels in that there isn't really anything resembling an over-arching, multi-volume plot line. Each book is its own self-contained episode, where even the recurring main/side characters are always reintroduced to the reader under the assumption that it could be the first book in the series the reader has picked up. I suspect that's why they were such a steady fixture of the "airport novel" market for decades. People could just pick them up on a whim even if they had never read any of the preceding novels in the series.

Though I recommend to start with "Sahara", since it's one of the more conventional and well-grounded novels in the series. There are quite a few in the series that get quite outlandish and less grounded with the "saving the world" plot formula and the historical fiction elements.
 

LegoTugboat

True & Honest Fan
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You can start pretty much anywhere with his "Dirk Pitt" series. They are structured very similarly to the James Bond novels in that there isn't really anything resembling an over-arching, multi-volume plot line. Each book is its own self-contained episode, where even the recurring main/side characters are always reintroduced to the reader under the assumption that it could be the first book in the series the reader has picked up. I suspect that's why they were such a steady fixture of the "airport novel" market for decades. People could just pick them up on a whim even if they had never read any of the preceding novels in the series.

Though I recommend to start with "Sahara", since it's one of the more conventional and well-grounded novels in the series. There are quite a few in the series that get quite outlandish and less grounded with the "saving the world" plot formula and the historical fiction elements.

Yes, they're all pretty good. I mean, the plots do basically boil down to the brute and the smart guy finding a mysterious woman who's part of an evil plan, either directly or indirectly, taking her out for a date, doing her, then getting involved in the plot, having a real evil bastard introduced, like someone who would actually torture small children and break women's bones and enjoy it, then using something with fancy tech/cool old car to get to a place in a hurry, foiling evil plan and then modestly accepting the reward.

But here's the thing, it's all glorious. There's a scene in Sahara where they have to defend an abandoned foreign legion fort with whatever they can find nearby. Old rifles, molotov cocktails,
GAU-8 Avenger Gatling Gun...
Y'know, mostly common stuff they find lying around. And that's not even the most awesome scene in the book.

Like I said in the subheading, it's manly men doing manly things.
 

millais

The Yellow Rose of Victoria, Texas
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Yes, they're all pretty good. I mean, the plots do basically boil down to the brute and the smart guy finding a mysterious woman who's part of an evil plan, either directly or indirectly, taking her out for a date, doing her, then getting involved in the plot, having a real evil bastard introduced, like someone who would actually torture small children and break women's bones and enjoy it, then using something with fancy tech/cool old car to get to a place in a hurry, foiling evil plan and then modestly accepting the reward.

But here's the thing, it's all glorious. There's a scene in Sahara where they have to defend an abandoned foreign legion fort with whatever they can find nearby. Old rifles, molotov cocktails,
GAU-8 Avenger Gatling Gun...
Y'know, mostly common stuff they find lying around. And that's not even the most awesome scene in the book.

Like I said in the subheading, it's manly men doing manly things.
What I always appreciated about them is that even though when you briefly summarize it, the plot and everything can sound quite ludicrous and fantastical, all the novels have very solid pacing and well-constructed buildup (that simultaneously doesn't overstay its welcome), so it's not constantly pushing at your suspension of disbelief when you are reading them.
 
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