Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. At the start of Dietrich's superb historical thriller, his
swashbuckling hero, American Ethan Gage, who's living in Paris during the
waning days of the French Revolution and was once apprenticed to Benjamin
Franklin, wins a curious Egyptian medallion in a card game. Soon after,
he's set upon by thieves, chased by the police, attacked by bandits,
befriended by Gypsies, saved by a British spy and then packed off to join
Napoleon's army as it embarks on its ill-fated Egyptian campaign. There the
story really heats up. Once in Egypt, Gage finds himself beset by evildoers
bent on stealing the mysterious medallion. As in previous novels like
Hadrian's Wall and Scourge of God, Dietrich combines a likable hero
surrounded by a cast of fascinating historical characters. Riveting battle
scenes, scantily clad women, mathematical puzzles, mysteries of the
pharaohs, reckless heroism, hairsbreadth escapes and undaunted courage add
up to unbeatable adventure rivaling the exploits of George Macdonald
Fraser's Harry Flashman. Readers will cheer as the indomitable Gage floats
off in a runaway hot-air balloon, hard on the trail of his next exotic
undertaking. Author tour. (Feb.)
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Booklist
The author of, among other thrillers, Hadrian's Wall (2004) and
The Scourge of God (2005) takes us back to late-eighteenth-century Paris,
where American Ethan Gage comes into possession of an ancient medallion and
then, almost immediately, is implicated in a woman's murder. Later, he
joins Napoleon's expedition into Egypt, where the Great Pyramids could
provide the French dictator with the secrets of world conquest or spell
certain disaster--for Napoleon and t he rest of humanity. Rich in period
detail and ancient mythology, this epic-scale thriller succeeds on the
strength of its small moments: a conversation that illuminates the plot, a
description that captures our imagination. It's of interest, too, to see
Napoleon reimagined as an adventurer, a dreamer, and an intellectual.
Incorporating some of the well-known speculation about the pyramids (the
mathematical significance of the Giza pyramid's design, for example) but
not taking it altogether seriously, the novel is a big, exciting romp that
will keep high-concept thriller fans on the edge of their seats. David
Pitt
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