The Third Gate
by:
Lincoln Child (author)
An archaeological expedition digging where it shouldn’t. . . A crown so powerful it is rumored to be cursed. . . And the one man who can explain it all. . . Deep in a nearly impassable swamp south of the Egyptian border, an archaeological team is searching for the burial chamber of King Narmer,...
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An archaeological expedition digging where it shouldn’t. . . A crown so powerful it is rumored to be cursed. . . And the one man who can explain it all. . . Deep in a nearly impassable swamp south of the Egyptian border, an archaeological team is searching for the burial chamber of King Narmer, the fabled pharaoh. Narmer's crown might be buried with him: the elusive "double" crown of the two Egypts. Amid the nightmarish, disorienting tangle of mud and dead vegetation, strange things begin to happen. Could an ancient curse be responsible? Jeremy Logan, history professor and master interpreter of bizarre and inexplicable enigmas, is brought onto the project to investigate. What he finds raises fresh questions . . . and immediate alarm.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780307473745 (0307473740)
ASIN: 307473740
Publish date: February 26th 2013
Publisher: Anchor
Pages no: 403
Edition language: English
Formulaic. Predictable. Still it was fun. Written by a skilled professional thriller writer, the story hums along in a Da Vinci Code/Indiana Jones sort of way. It was a good light read. Light on the history. Light on the tension. Light on the depth of characterization. Even the chapters are ...
This being the first in the Jeremy Logan series, I expected a lot of info dumping which we got but just not in the vein I expected. Jeremy Logan is a self-titled enigmalogist, someone who debunks or confirms bizarre events - ghosts, haunted houses, vengeful spirits etc. Jeremy joins the high tech ...
This book pulled me in with the NDE at the beginning and kept me going along with all the Eqyptology but is somehow didn't put it all together for me. Still a very enjoyable read, and definitely kept the pages turning but it just wasn't heavy enough on one side or the other.
For his latest solo outing, Lincoln Child (author of Terminal Freeze, Deep Storm, and the Pendergast series with frequent co-writer Douglas Preston) shifts the tomb-raiders-battle-ancient-evil story from the clichés of the genre by moving the setting away from the usual sand-swept plains of Egypt. I...