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The Dead Sea Cipher (1970)

por Elizabeth Peters

Otros autores: Ver la sección otros autores.

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632937,347 (3.44)20
Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

It was the start of a grand adventure in a land of antiquity: a rare opportunity to visit biblical places rich in tradition and shrouded in mystery. But in the middle of Beirut, a world away from everything she knows, Dinah Van der Lyn suddenly hears angry voices through the wall of her hotel. The voices are followed by a crash and cries for helpâ??in English. The brutal shattering of an evening's stillness becomes a prelude to terror.

Without warning, Dinah is drawn into something unholy transpiring in the sacred city. Her search for the answers hidden in the shadows will take her to the fabled cities of Sidon, Tyre, Damascus, and Jerusalem. And as she races through ancient, twisting streets, teeming with secrets and peril, she is forced to trust an enigmatic stranger, a man who may be leading her to safetyâ??or to her doom… (más)

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Mostrando 1-5 de 9 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
A stupid girl is forced by her father to go on a tour of the Holy Land. While there, she finds herself in the middle of an international espionage plot to suppress the discovery of more Dead Sea scrolls. All the while she is harassed by a colossal jackass of an archaeologist.

I received a stack of these Elizabeth Peters books from a friend of mine who knows I am a fan of Peters’ Vicky Bliss series. However, I am frustrated by the predictable, formulaic plots and annoying characters in these standalone books.

Dumb heroine with daddy issues…check
Exotic locale…check
A colossal jerk as love interest…check
International looting plot…check
Reader yawning in boredom…triple check! ( )
  missterrienation | Oct 21, 2023 |
Dinah van der Lyn travels to the Holy Land and stumbles into an international intrigue tied to the Dead Sea Scrolls.

She's a young professional opera singer, and the daughter of a Pennsylvania clergyman who has an interest in Biblical archaeology. The tour she has signed up for hasn't even left Beirut yet when Dinah overhears a loud and violent argument in the hotel room next to hers. It ends in murder. Since the argument was in Arabic, Dinah has no idea what was said, but not everyone believes that.

It's 1970, so there are no cell phones or internet access, and trans-Atlantic phone calls are still a very expensive big deal. This changes the pace of events; simple things take longer, and everyone consequently feels more rushed, pressured, and confused. Is Jeff Smith really a professor of archaeology, or an impostor with an obviously fake name? Who is Cartwright? Is Mrs. Marks really the widow of an English clergyman, taking a memorial tour? For that matter, why should anyone believe Dinah is who she says she is?

As they visit major archaeological sites, Dinah chases rumors of new and potentially explosive Dead Sea Scrolls, and tries to figure out who is more dishonest and untrustworthy, Smith or Cartwright. Along the way, she flees armed pursuers through the streets of Jerusalem, and discovers the dubious joys of walking, crawling, and climbing through underground tunnels.

It's a light, entertaining mystery, great for summer reading or listening.

Recommended.

I borrowed this book from the library. ( )
  LisCarey | Sep 19, 2018 |
Dinah travels to Jerusalem, because it was one of her father’s greatest hopes to travel there, but with him ending up in a wheel chair that hope is crushed. So being the marvelous daughter she is decides to let him vicariously live out his dream journey through a bunch of postcards and her travel journal. Everything goes along smoothly until one night in the hotel she’s staying at Dinah overhears a heated conversation in Arabic and a cry for help shouted in English. Even though she doesn’t know Arabic and so doesn’t know what had been going on in the next room, she rushes next door to provide assistance if needed. On the way she runs into a charming man who claims to be the night manager and grills her on what she over heard and then lets her return to her room. Then next day after returning from a tour she discovers that there had been a murder in the room next too her and no one knows who the man posing to be the night manager was. From there things start to spiral out of control with people spying on and chasing after Dinah, because they believe she may know more than she admits to.

Loved the setting of Jerusalem, but I couldn’t really get into the plot. Or for that matter the characters. Everything kind of seemed bland. And I couldn’t stop thinking that the hero in this story reminded me a little of Emerson from Peters’s Amelia Peabody series. The book was alright, but not the greatest of Peters works. ( )
  Book_Minx | Jan 24, 2015 |
Dinah Van Der Lyn is in her room in a Beirut hotel when she hears a cry for help from the next room. She tells the person she assumes to be the night attendant. They discover a man named "Hank" dead. This tale of espionage leads Dinah through Tyre, Sidon, Damascus, Bethlehem, Jerusalem, and eventually to Qumran. Whom should Dinah trust--Cartwright or Smith? I expected a murder mystery rather than an espionage story and as such was a bit disappointed in the book. There is plenty of tension as the audience wonders if Dinah is trusting the right man. There's also questions about the identity of her traveling companions and their involvement.
  thornton37814 | Aug 11, 2011 |
When Dinah Van der Lyn travels to the Holy Land she finds herself thrust into the middle of an international plot involving the possible discovery of an ancient scroll that, if brought to light, would likely turn the Christian world on end. Danger and intrigue follow her through the Middle East, as do two handsome young men. Which, if either, should she trust?

I think I could describe this fairly accurately and simply as a dated Da Vinci Code light, (yes, it is possible to find a lighter work than Dan Brown's), set in the Middle East, with an ingenue protagonist.

I enjoyed the book well enough, but had to overlook its flaws...the dated feeling, (it was written in 1970), the overdone plot, and worst of all, an ending that I felt was weak, as if the author was writing her way out of a box.

The plot was rapidly paced, though, and I found the main idea and setting interesting. It kept me entertained. ( )
  bookwoman247 | Feb 16, 2011 |
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Nombre del autorRolTipo de autor¿Obra?Estado
Elizabeth Petersautor principaltodas las edicionescalculado
Conlin, GraceNarradorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
Saunier, ClaudeTraductorautor secundarioalgunas edicionesconfirmado
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"Had I but known," Dinah said, under her breath.
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This noise was even more shocking, for it was in English, and it consisted of the single word "help!"
A cynic, she reminded herself, is only a frustrated idealist.
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Fiction. Mystery. Suspense. HTML:

It was the start of a grand adventure in a land of antiquity: a rare opportunity to visit biblical places rich in tradition and shrouded in mystery. But in the middle of Beirut, a world away from everything she knows, Dinah Van der Lyn suddenly hears angry voices through the wall of her hotel. The voices are followed by a crash and cries for helpâ??in English. The brutal shattering of an evening's stillness becomes a prelude to terror.

Without warning, Dinah is drawn into something unholy transpiring in the sacred city. Her search for the answers hidden in the shadows will take her to the fabled cities of Sidon, Tyre, Damascus, and Jerusalem. And as she races through ancient, twisting streets, teeming with secrets and peril, she is forced to trust an enigmatic stranger, a man who may be leading her to safetyâ??or to her doom

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