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The Book of the Dead by Douglas Preston
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The Book of the Dead

by Douglas Preston

Series: Pendergast (7)

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1,368292,685 (3.85)11
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Warner Books (2006), Hardcover

Member:TheCriticalTimes
Collections:Your libraryRating:***
Tags:Literary Fiction, Adventure, Mystery
2006 (7) action (6) adventure (16) Agent Pendergast (20) brothers (5) crime (15) detective (7) Egypt (13) Egyptology (6) fantasy (5) FBI (11) fiction (152) hardcover (11) horror (23) murder (9) museums (13) mystery (130) New York (13) New York City (5) own (8) Pendergast (72) Pendergast Series (11) Preston-Child (7) read (19) serial killer (5) series (19) suspense (41) TBR (12) thriller (109) unread (13)
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English (27)  Danish (1)  French (1)  All languages (29)
Showing 1-5 of 27 (next | show all)
This is the seventh Pendergast novel, and the last in an internal trilogy. This is also the first Pendergast novel I read, so I have no knowledge of previous events and character developments. Luckily that did not matter much when reading this book, as most events could be inferred from the story itself.
I would describe this as a thriller, while I expected more of a Dan Brown like novel. It is a fun read, but not much more than that, as some actions are over the top, and backgrounds (specific to this book) are not explained completely, leaving the reader hanging a bit. ( )
  divinenanny | Nov 17, 2009 |
A story involving a hot babe, a psychotic killer who hatches a 15-year plot to spring mass death and mayhem, and an ancient Egyptian tomb originally excavated by Napoleon's expedition and reconstructed in a sub-basement in New York's Natural History Museum seems like it should have all of the elements of a great story. This is the second Preston book I've listened to this year; the other was less disjointed. My favorite thing about this book was the reader: Rene Auberjonois of Benson and Deep Space Nine did a great, over-the-top dramatic reading that seemed more interesting than the words themselves.

The strange ending makes more sense now that I know it's part of a series. There is no mention of that on the CD box. ( )
  JeffV | Nov 8, 2009 |
Der grandiose und fulminate Abschluß der "Pendergast-Trilogie". Perfekte Unterhaltung, hochgradig spannend, flüssig geschrieben, ungeheuer detaillreich und ausgefeilt bis zum Extrem. Einfach perfekt. ( )
  Doktor_Stein | May 5, 2009 |
The book was fast paced and a quick read. It kept me entertained. Some of the plot was unbelievable but hey that's why they call it fiction. I liked it and would recommend this to others. There are two books that proceed this with some of the same characters. Having read them would of made more sense of this book. ( )
  mmamadden | Apr 10, 2009 |
I listened to this book by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child on my way to and from work (it's a long drive) as well as any other time I was briefly in the car. Each time I got back in, I felt as if the time between listening had been simply the intermission for the story. I was instantly drawn back in the crazy lives of these characters. I was a little confused at times when story from the characters past was brought up. It was done in such a way that made me feel I was missing a book in a series, which I realize now that I am. I had read Relic several years and vaguely recognized some of the character names from that story but it's been so long that I pretty much only remember that it was a book about a plant that turns people into monsters when they become addicted to it. Oh, yeah, I also remember that the movie changed some very important parts of the story but aside from the fact that the cop in the movie was actually two people in the book I don't remember that either! hehe, so I'm not writing about that one!

Apparently Book of the Dead and it's two previous "chapters" involve many of the same characters I first became acquainted with in Relic. I am surprised that I genuinely like these novels. For the most part they mysteries in the Sherlock Holmes style, something that generally bores more. Even though I now realize that I missed two books in this series and I will probably go back and read them, I don't feel like I was left out of the loop. The writing in this book is very well done. The authors have filled in people like me on the storyline while not boring those who probably read the others books. I've read authors who go on for pages describing back story to the point that you want to rip those pages out and just GET ON WITH IT. This is not done that way. So while I was little confused at first, by the end of the story I knew all that was important without the story getting bogged down.

The storyline itself is fascinating. It's like a modern day Set and Osiris, except this isn't dismembered and brought back by his wife. Or I guess you could argue that Pendergast's time in prison is a death and he is reborn when he is free. He's certainly not the same person he when he emerges. All around the struggle between brothers is the subplot (so we think at first) of the re-opening of an old exhibit at the Museum of Natural History: The tomb of Senef. This tomb is supposedly cursed and people begin dying in very strange ways...What will happen?

If you're interested in listening to an audiobook, like I did, I highly recommend this one. The narrator, Rene Auberjonois, reminded me of being read to as a child. He did different voices for the characters (without getting hokey). The constant tension in the story was heightened by his reading style. There were times when I had extra time between classes and stayed in my car instead of going into the school early just so I could hear the next two minutes of story. It was simply that good. ( )
1 vote TonyaSB | Mar 18, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 27 (next | show all)
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Lincoln Child dedicates this book to his mother, Nancy Child.

Douglas Preston dedicates this book to Anna Marguerite McCann Taggart.
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Early-morning sunlight gilded the cobbled drive of the staff entrance of the New York Museum of Natural History, illuminating a glass pillbox just outside the granite archway. Within the pillbox, a figure sat slumped in his chair; and elderly man, familiar to all museum staff. He puffed contentedly on a calabash pipe and basked in the warmth of one of those false-spring days that occur in New York City in February, the kind that coaxes daffodils, crocuses, and fruit trees into premature bloom, only to freeze them dead later in the month.
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The Book of the Dead (novel)

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0446618500, Mass Market Paperback)

A brilliant FBI agent, rotting away in a high security prison for a murder he did not commit. His brilliant, psychotic brother, about to perpetrate a horrific crime. A young woman with an extraordinary past, on the edge of a violent breakdown. An ancient Egyptian tomb about to be unveiled at a celebrity-studded New York gala, an enigmatic curse released. Memento Mori

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 16:22:54 -0500)

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