Daniel Knox's first love is history and archeology, specifically on Alexander the Great. When he pisses off a local mobster on the coast of Egypt, he heads to Alexandria to an archaeology colleague's apartment to hide out for a while. He learns his friend is getting to participate on the dig for this newly discovered tomb. Sneaking in with his friend, Daniel sees signs that the find is far bigger than anyone realizes and might hold clues to finally unravelling one of the world's greatest mysteries: Where is Alexander the Great buried?
In his lifetime, Alexander was beloved as a god, and across the Mediterranean, everyone wanted to be close to him. Upon his death, there was a mad scrabbling among his former allies to secure his empire for themselves. Even now, nearly 2500 years later, Alexander is still being fought over. With the discovery of this tomb and the revelation of its relics, the race is on to find Alexander. Rival archeologists, Egyptian officials, and Macedonian nationalists all scurry and scramble, attacking each other along the way as they hunt for a glorious prize—the body of Alexander the Great.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
March 18, 2009 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
- ISBN: 9780446599566
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780446544375
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780446544375
- File size: 380 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
December 1, 2008
Daniel Knox, a dive instructor and former archeologist, is just one of many characters searching for Alexander the Great's lost tomb in British author Adams's less than suspenseful debut. Aboard a dive boat in the Red Sea, Knox goes against his better judgment and rescues an attractive young blonde from the clutches of wealthy Hassan al-Assyuti, who's intent on rape and battery. Knox must then go on the run, leaving him barely enough time to fall in love with Gaille Bonnard, a demotic language expert working on a dig connected to Alexander in northern Egypt. In Alexandria, construction manager Mohammed el-Dahab has stumbled on a necropolis that will eventually point all the competing searchers toward Alexander's actual tomb. Thriller fans with an interest in Egyptology and Alexander will find much to like, while those seeking swift action and adventure will find themselves bogged down in too many subplots and historical factoids. -
Library Journal
February 15, 2009
In a welcome respite from the glut of Christendom-shattering, artifact-protecting, Secret Order thrillers, debut author Adams offers up something new. A cobbled-together teama Greek archaeologist, her French assistant/language specialist, and quasi-corrupt Egyptian antiquities officialsfinds a clue that, when deciphered, leads them to the "real" tomb of Alexander the Great. Here's the twistthe whole operation is funded by a wealthy Macedonian nationalist who will use Alexander's body to mobilize his compatriots to wage war against Greece for sovereignty. Rival archaeologist Daniel Knox is our misunderstood action hero and romantic lead in the style of Indiana Jones and Dirk Pitt, fractionally more skilled at eluding peril than becoming ensnared in it. Adams racks up a generous body count; some victims we have grown to like. The violence is graphic and the language at times coarse, though commensurate with the world of baksheesh, graft, and unchecked power depicted here. Not literature, but a plausible, fun heist-thriller that compels the reader to wonder, What if? Recommended for most popular fiction collections. [Prepub Alert, "LJ" 11/15/08.]Laura A.B. Cifelli, Ft. Myers-Lee Cty. P.L., FLCopyright 2009 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Booklist
Starred review from February 1, 2009
Apparently everybody hates Daniel Knox, an American archaeologist turned dive instructor who is currently living in Egypt. Theres the nasty Hassan, his rich Egyptian boss, whom Daniel beat up in order to keep him from raping a young woman, and Hassans even nastier head of security, Nessim. Theres Gaille Bonnard, the Egyptologist who blames Daniel for the death of her father, and Nicolas Dragoumis, the wealthy industrialist whose own father seems oddly determined to ruin Daniel. Further complicating Daniels life is, of all people, Alexander the Great, the Macedonian king who proves that being dead for 2,300 years doesnt mean you still cant wreak havoc in peoples lives. After Alexanders death, in 323 BCE, his body was brought to Egypt in a massive golden funeral carriage; Alexanders power-hungry general, Ptolemy, stole Alexanders body for his own purposes, and the funeral carriage vanished. Daniel thinks he knows where the carriage is, but that pales in comparison to a new discovery: artifacts that might point the way to the long-lost body of Alexander himself. All Daniel, a lifelong Alexander scholar, needs to do is keep clear of all the people who are out to get him long enough to solve the mystery. This is a hugely entertaining thriller, very much in the vein of Matthew Reilly: an adroit mixture of action, character, and history. Daniel and his plucky Australian partner, Rick, make for an engaging pair of heroes, and the author does an excellent job of keeping the story moving at a brisk clip while giving us all the historical background we require to understand what all the fuss is about. Theres also a nice romantic subplot, and one or two smartly constructed twists. Surprisingly, considering its high quality, this is Adams first novel. It was published in the UK in November 2007, and its sequel, The Exodus Quest, in November 08. North American readers of Cipher will eagerly await the arrival here of Quest.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)
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