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The Dead Sea Cipher

The Dead Sea Cipher

List Price: $44.95
Your Price: $44.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Murder and mystery in the sands of the Middle East
Review: *The Dead Sea Cipher* is surprisingly undated for a mystery written in 1970. In fact, the only element that gives it away is the ease with which the characters move through Lebanon, Syria, and Israel on a bus tour of Biblical sites.

Opera contralto Dinah van der Lyn is trying to soak up a little history between singing engagements when she overhears a murder in the hotel room next door. The Beirut police are at first dubious and then suspicious of Dinah's own politics -- she's the granddaughter of a rabbi and the daughter of a minister.

Other mysterious characters begin following and questioning Dinah, including handsome government agent Tony Cartwright and Biblical scholar Jeff Smith. Soon she's looking with imsgivings at every member of her multi-cultural tour group. There's an antiquities smuggler in their midst, a spy or two ... and a killer.

Elizabeth Peters uses her archeology background to illustrate the heat and backbreaking work of the scientists as well as the exhilaration of a rare find. And the "find" in *The Dead Sea Cipher* is exciting, indeed: a cave full of ancient Biblical scrolls with one special payoff.

Clear and interesting information on Sidon, Tyre, Damascus, Jericho, and other Biblical sites is well mixed with entertaining, even outrageous characters. And unlike other heroines of 30 years ago, Dinah is self reliant and intelligent as well as spunky.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A tourist in the Holy Land gets more than she bargained for
Review: Dinah is on a tour of the Holy Land. Her ailing father was unable to make the trip, so she is sure to save up as many memories as possible for the biblical scholar. On her first night, she hears an argument and what appears to be a murder. She calls for help and this sets in motion a series of events that she may never forget, if she survives it all.

I really enjoyed this book, it reminds me of her novels as Barbara Michaels without the supernatural element that seems to run through those. It starts out slowly, but quickly picks up speed and is very hard to put down at the end.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A tourist in the Holy Land gets more than she bargained for
Review: Dinah is on a tour of the Holy Land. Her ailing father was unable to make the trip, so she is sure to save up as many memories as possible for the biblical scholar. On her first night, she hears an argument and what appears to be a murder. She calls for help and this sets in motion a series of events that she may never forget, if she survives it all.

I really enjoyed this book, it reminds me of her novels as Barbara Michaels without the supernatural element that seems to run through those. It starts out slowly, but quickly picks up speed and is very hard to put down at the end.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not yet Amelia
Review: Fans of Amelia Emerson should be warned: this is an entertaining, sometimes witty, and profoundly human story on a group of international visitors to Lebanon, Syria, and Israel in the late 60s by the future author of Amelia, but not yet the author of Amelia herself. In comparison with the Egyptological background of the Amelia series, Ms Peters research into Biblical Archaeology, even according to the standards of the late 60s, is disappointing. It is inconceivable that even a lay reader of 'Biblical Archaeological", as the heroine is supposed to be, would not recognize the ciphers at her first glance; it is impossible to swim through the Jordan river opposite of Jericho and get on's mouth full of water, as the hero is said to have done (did he crawl with his nose in the mud?). The plot and the characters are not without interest, but in order to keep up with Ms. Peters later production, the novel would need thorough rewriting.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: sorry i bought it
Review: i am three quarters thru this book and no amount of money could make me finish it. what do people see in this writer? the dialogue is drivel, the characters implausible, and the situations unlikely, to say the least. so here somebody finds another gospel of the life of jesus. of course, this is accompanied by murder and skullduggery and an airhead opera singer (of all things!) heroine. i'm sorry. maybe if i were twelve, i'd think it was really cool.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It's the best one without Amelia Peabody
Review: I love this story. It tells the story of the Dead Sea Scrolls and brings them to life for me. I enjoyed the heroine, Dinah, because she seemed to be a real person. This was my favorite Peters mystery that did not feature Amelia Peabody. Peters love affair with Egypt is clear and this mystery did not disappoint me. Give it a try and see if Dinah doesn't grow on you.


Rating: 1 stars
Summary: not worth the read...:(
Review: I'd read THe Love Talker before and didn't think too much of it but I figured maybe I was too judgemental, but then I read this one and I don't think these books are all that great. There is practically nothing on character development or any love growing...ooh I meet a guy and ooh I'm in love with one and not the other because...God alone knows why...
Anywayz, I'm glad mine was a used copy! It was very boring.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A fun puzzle to the last page!
Review: Like other mysteries by Elizabeth Peters, The Dead Sea Cipher is a fun, well-written puzzle. Peters manages to combine comedy, suspense, and a few "Beautiful Thoughts" in this tale of the intrigue a young tourist stumbles into on her tour of archaeological sites in the Middle East.

Dinah, a minister's daughter on a Biblical sightseeing jaunt, is faced with a classic dilemma for a young heroine: which of the mysterious young men shadowing her is the one she should trust? The dashing Mr. Cartwright and the erratic Mr. Smith pop up in the most unexpected places as each tries to convince her that he is the "good guy."

This choice may not be too much of a challenge for veteran readers, but the rest of the puzzle (for example, who among the odd assortment of characters in Dinah's tour group is involved, and for that matter, involved in what?) will keep everyone guessing right up to the last page.

This mystery, with its backdrop of Palestinian archaeology and tourism in the Middle East, makes for an entertaining read from start to finish. Peters' description of the scenery is vivid enough to give the reader an excellent mental picture of the terrain, but it never interferes with the pace of the story.

The mystery Dinah must solve is almost as tangled as the politics of the countries she visits as she tries to unravel the various political, religious, and scholarly motives of everyone involved. In this exciting and often humorous chase through ancient ruins and modern cities, Peters scores high marks for romance, laughs, adventure, and history.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: worth a rainy afternoon
Review: Many E. Peters fans have found that her strongest works are the series books, especially Amelia and Vicky Bliss (though Jaqueline Kirby does have her admirers). The non-series aren't so good in general, partly because they're all earlier books, and partly because having to wrap characters up in one go seemed to encourage her to make them flatter.
If you're out of Amelias and want something new for a change, this is one of her better non-series books. Interesting (more than the Jackal's Head) and fun (more than 400 Rabbits).
Camelot Caper and Legend in Green Velvet are decent choices too.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: worth a rainy afternoon
Review: Many E. Peters fans have found that her strongest works are the series books, especially Amelia and Vicky Bliss (though Jaqueline Kirby does have her admirers). The non-series aren't so good in general, partly because they're all earlier books, and partly because having to wrap characters up in one go seemed to encourage her to make them flatter.
If you're out of Amelias and want something new for a change, this is one of her better non-series books. Interesting (more than the Jackal's Head) and fun (more than 400 Rabbits).
Camelot Caper and Legend in Green Velvet are decent choices too.


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