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The Romanov Prophecy by Steve Berry
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The Romanov Prophecy: A Novel

by Steve Berry

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1,033203,852 (3.63)18
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Ballantine Books (2007), Edition: Reprint, Mass Market Paperback, 448 pages

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Read this about a year and a half ago, borrowed it from a friend and been wanting to read it since I saw it on the book store. It seemed that I had great expectations and this book didn't really meet it. Story was promising, I've always liked historical fiction and reading about them, but his writing style lacks a certain pull. Some of his one-liners at the end of the chapter are supposed to be page-turners but they didn't really compel me to do so. It's an average read, research was thorough although I really hate how he names his villains like cartoons. It could've been written better the way he did with The Third Secret, which was surprisingly fluent. I have to give him credit for the suspense, though I've read better books but still, suspense and action and all, it didn't keep me at the edge of my seat. ( )
  yurioujo | Oct 11, 2009 |
I already read several Steve Berry books before, so I knew what to expect. Berry writes adventure novels, lot's of action, a historical mystery and some love. They are historically inaccurate, they are no literary master pieces, but they are fun quick reads.

This one covers the election of a new Tsar in Russia, where our lead character, Miles Lord, a black American lawyer, has to find the Romanov closest related to the murdered Tsar Nicholas II. Of course there are groups in Russia who try to stop him, while he and a lady friend try to solve an 80 year old mystery. Fun ans suspenseful. ( )
  divinenanny | Sep 17, 2009 |
This book was very excited and elicited the same feelings that I got when reading The Da Vinci Code. It is in the same vain, a historical-mystery-thriller type book, and it is a page-turner. This book interested me because I know little about the history of the Soviet Union and Russia; I learned a lot from this book. ( )
  cpeacock | Jul 13, 2009 |
Gripping suspense from the very first page. Should be made into a movie with Denzel Washington as the main character. Miles Lord is a black man who is an American lawyer in Russia, and when he is attacked, his search leads him to an old secret about the Romanov family.
  nolak | Jun 25, 2009 |
Ever since the Romanovs were executed in 1918, we've had endless conspiracy theories about who survived (if anyone) and I am surprised it's taken until now for a major author to produce a novel about it. "The Romanov Prophecy" is actually quite a good piece of work, well researched and well written, although you know how it is going to end. I would have liked to have seen one of the Romanov's still alive in 2007 (now there would have been a shocker of an ending!) but I guess that would have been too much of a stretch and mathematically implausible.

Despite the all-too predictable ending, this is a great book to read if you like this historical period. ( )
  obsessedwithbooks | Mar 21, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Russia -- a country in which things that just don't happen happen.
--Peter the Great
A year shall come of Russia's blackest dread; Then will the crown fall from the royal head, the throne of tsars will perish in the mud, The food of many will be death and blood.
-- Mikhail Lermontov (1830)
Russia: mysterious dark continent, "a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma" in Winston Churchill's phrase, remote, inaccessible to foreigners, inexplicable even to natives. That is the myth, encouraged by Russians themselves, who preferthat no one discover who they really are and how they really live.
--Robert Kaiser, Russia: The People and the Power(1984)
For all its trials, for all its mistakes, the story of Russia at the end of the [twentieth] century must be counted as a kind of revival, a resurrection.
--David Remnick, Resurrection: The Struggle for a New Russia (1997)
Dedication
For Amy and Elizabeth
First words
Alexandra, Empress of all Russia, turned from her bedside vigil as the door swung open, the first time in hours her gaze had been diverted from the pitiful child lying prone beneath the sheets.
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Wikipedia in English (3)

Steve Berry (novelist)

The Romanov Prophecy

The Third Secret

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0345460065, Mass Market Paperback)

Ekaterinburg, Russia: July 16, 1918. Ten months have passed since Nicholas II’s reign was cut short by revolutionaries. Tonight, the White Army advances on the town where the Tsar and his family are being held captive by the Bolsheviks. Nicholas dares to hope for salvation. Instead, the Romanovs are coldly and methodically executed.

Moscow: Present Day. Atlanta lawyer Miles Lord, fluent in Russian and well versed in the country’s history, is thrilled to be in Moscow on the eve of such a momentous event. After the fall of Communism and a succession of weak governments, the Russian people have voted to bring back the monarchy. The new tsar will be chosen from the distant relatives of Nicholas II by a specially appointed commission, and Miles’ job is to perform a background check on the Tsarist candidate favored by a powerful group of Western businessmen. But research quickly becomes the least of Miles’ concerns when he is nearly killed by gunmen on a city plaza.

Suddenly Miles is racing across continents, shadowed by nefarious henchmen. At first, his only question is why people are pursuing him. But after a strange conversation with a mysterious Russian, who steers Miles toward the writings of Rasputin, he becomes desperate to know more–most important, what really happened to the family of Russia’s last tsar?

His only companion is Akilina Petrov, a Russian circus performer sympathetic to his struggle, and his only guide is a cryptic message from Rasputin that implies that the bloody night of so long ago is not the last chapter in the Romanovs’ story . . . and that someone might even have survived the massacre. The prophecy’s implications are earth-shattering–not only for the future of the tsar and mother Russia, but also for Miles himself.

Steve Berry, national bestselling author of the phenomenal thriller The Amber Room, once again delves into rich historical fact to produce an explosive page-turner. In The Romanov Prophecy, the authentic and the speculative meld into a fascinating and exceptionally suspenseful work of fiction.


From the Hardcover edition.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:52 -0400)

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