The Rosetta Key (Ethan Gage Series #2)

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Overview

American adventurer Ethan Gage barely escaped with his life from murderous thieves, survived a nerve-racking sea voyage and the deadly Egyptian sands when attached to Napoleon's army, and solved a five-thousand-year-old riddle with the help of a mysterious medallion.

But that was child's play . . .

The year is 1799. As Bonaparte's army descends upon Israel, intent upon conquest, Ethan Gage finds himself embroiled in an ancient mystery in the Holy Land, searching for a legendary Egyptian scroll imbued with awesome powers.

The courageous and resourceful Gage must keep the mysterious ...

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Overview

American adventurer Ethan Gage barely escaped with his life from murderous thieves, survived a nerve-racking sea voyage and the deadly Egyptian sands when attached to Napoleon's army, and solved a five-thousand-year-old riddle with the help of a mysterious medallion.

But that was child's play . . .

The year is 1799. As Bonaparte's army descends upon Israel, intent upon conquest, Ethan Gage finds himself embroiled in an ancient mystery in the Holy Land, searching for a legendary Egyptian scroll imbued with awesome powers.

The courageous and resourceful Gage must keep the mysterious document from his enemy, Napoleon—or, failing that, wrest it from him, even if it means pursuing his vengeful adversary back to France. And the wisdom of his great mentor, Benjamin Franklin, will offer Gage no solace should Bonaparte succeed in unlocking the terrible secrets of the Book of Thoth—for whoever masters its magic will rule the world.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

The packaging of this audiobook says "performed by Jeff Woodman," and does he ever perform! Woodman executes a variety of accents in both sexes as he brings to life this rollicking Indiana Jones-like story of an adventurer in search of ancient secrets, and the woman he loves, set during Napoleon's attempted conquest of Palestine and Egypt. Woodman creates a memorable first-person protagonist in American Ethan Gage, who remains likable despite his many foibles, con-artist morals, frankly admitted cowardice and frequent use of annoyingly folksy similes. Woodman also pulls off convincing French, British and Arabic voices. His pacing never flags through the endless twists, turns and hair-raising escapes that make up this treasure-hunting tale. This enjoyable audio should be accompanied by a large bowl of popcorn. A Harper hardcover (Reviews, Feb. 18). (May)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From The Critics

Adult/High School -A sequel to Napoleon's Pyramids (HarperCollins, 2007). American adventurer Ethan Gage, protégé of Benjamin Franklin, meets up once more with Napoleon as the French general is beginning his 1798 invasion of the Holy Land. Moving from Jaffa to Acre to Mt. Tabor to Petra and then to Alexandria and Rosetta in Egypt, Gage is never more than one step away from trouble. He is in search of his beloved, Astiza, last seen falling from a hot-air balloon into the Nile, and at the same time he is doing a little espionage for Napoleon's British enemies and hoping to find an ancient Egyptian scroll, the Book of Thoth. Gage's gambling skills, his knowledge of electricity, and his quick wits keep him alive in situations that would daunt a lesser man. He has adventures in love and war, comes close to solving an ancient mystery, and provides an ingenious explanation for the missing piece of the Rosetta Stone. Historical fiction meets thriller here, with plenty to interest fans of both genres. The action is nearly nonstop, the humor is plentiful, and the intrigue is more than enough to keep the pages turning.-Sarah Flowers, Santa Clara County Library, CA

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780641877353
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 4/22/2008
  • Pages: 352
  • Product dimensions: 6.00 (w) x 9.10 (h) x 1.10 (d)

Meet the Author

William Dietrich

William Dietrich is the author of eight novels, which have sold in twenty-eight languages, as well as several works of nonfiction. He is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, historian, and naturalist, and teaches at Western Washington University.

Read an Excerpt

The Rosetta Key

Chapter One

Eyeing a thousand musket barrels aimed at one's chest does tend to force consideration of whether the wrong path has been taken. So I did consider it, each muzzle bore looking as wide as the bite of a mongrel stray in a Cairo alley. But no, while I'm modest to a fault, I have my self-righteous side as well—and by my light it wasn't me but the French army that had gone astray. Which I could have explained to my former friend, Napoleon Bonaparte, if he hadn't been up on the dunes out of hailing distance, aloof and annoyingly distracted, his buttons and medals gleaming in the Mediterranean sun.

The first time I'd been on a beach with Bonaparte, when he landed his army in Egypt in 1798, he told me the drowned would be immortalized by history. Now, nine months later outside the Palestinian port of Jaffa, history was to be made of me. French grenadiers were getting ready to shoot me and the hapless Muslim captives I'd been thrown in with, and once more I, Ethan Gage, was trying to figure out a way to sidestep destiny. It was a mass execution, you see, and I'd run afoul of the general I once attempted to befriend.

How far we'd both come in nine brief months!

I edged behind the biggest of the wretched Ottoman prisoners I could find, a Negro giant from the Upper Nile who I calculated might be just thick enough to stop a musket ball. All of us had been herded like bewildered cattle onto a lovely beach, eyes white and round in the darkest faces, the Turkish uniforms of scarlet, cream, emerald, and sapphire smeared with the smoke and blood of a savage sacking. There were lithe Moroccans, tall and dourSudanese, truculent pale Albanians, Circassian cavalry, Greek gunners, Turkish sergeants—the scrambled levies of a vast empire, all humbled by the French. And me, the lone American. Not only was I baffled by their babble; they often couldn't understand each other. The mob milled, their officers already dead, and their disorder a defeated contrast to the crisp lines of our executioners, drawn up as if on parade. Ottoman defiance had enraged Napoleon—you should never put the heads of emissaries on a pike—and their hungry numbers as prisoners threatened to be a crippling drag on his invasion. So we'd been marched through the orange groves to a crescent of sand just south of the captured port, the sparkling sea a lovely green and gold in the shallows, the hilltop city smoldering. I could see some green fruit still clinging to the shot-blown trees. My former benefactor and recent enemy, sitting on his horse like a young Alexander, was (through desperation or dire calculation) about to display a ruthlessness that his own marshals would whisper about for many campaigns to come. Yet he didn't even have the courtesy to pay attention! He was reading another of his moody novels, his habit to devour a book's page, tear it out, and pass it back to his officers. I was barefoot, bloody, and only forty miles as the crow flies from where Jesus Christ had died to save the world. The past several days of persecution, torment, and warfare hadn't persuaded me that our Savior's efforts had entirely succeeded in improving human nature.

"Ready!" A thousand musket hammers were pulled back.

Napoleon's henchmen had accused me of being a spy and a traitor, which was why I'd been marched with the other prisoners to the beach. And yes, circumstance had given a grain of truth to that characterization. But I hadn't set out with that intent, by any means. I'd simply been an American in Paris, whose tentative knowledge of electricity—and the need to escape an utterly unjust accusation of murder—resulted in my being included in the company of Napoleon's scientists, or savants, during his dazzling conquest of Egypt the year before. I'd also developed a knack for being on the wrong side at the wrong time. I'd taken fire from Mameluke cavalry, the woman I loved, Arab cutthroats, British broadsides, Muslim fanatics, French platoons—and I'm a likable man!

My latest French nemesis was a nasty scoundrel named Pierre Najac, an assassin and thief who couldn't get over the fact that I'd once shot him from beneath the Toulon stage when he tried to rob me of a sacred medallion. It's a long story, as an earlier volume will attest. Najac had come back into my life like a bad debt, and had kept me marching in the prisoner rank with a cavalry saber at my back. He was anticipating my imminent demise with the same feeling of triumph and loathing that one has when crushing a particularly obnoxious spider. I was regretting that I hadn't aimed a shave higher and two inches to the left.

As I've remarked before, it all seems to start with gambling. Back in Paris, it had been a card game that won me the mysterious medallion and started the trouble. This time, what had seemed a simple way to get a new start—taking the bewildered seamen of HMS Dangerous for every shilling they had before the British put me ashore in the Holy Land—had solved nothing and, it could be argued, had actually led to my present predicament. Let me repeat: gambling is a vice, and it is foolish to rely on chance.

"Aim!"

But I'm getting ahead of myself.

I, Ethan Gage, have spent most of my thirty-four years trying to keep out of too much trouble and away from too much work. As my mentor and onetime employer, the late, great Benjamin Franklin, would no doubt observe, these two ambitions are as at odds as positive and negative electricity. The pursuit of the latter, no work, is almost sure to defeat the former, no trouble. But that's a lesson, like the headache that follows alcohol or the treachery of beautiful women, forgotten as . . .

The Rosetta Key. Copyright © by William Dietrich. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating 4
( 36 )

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 16, 2009

    Rosetta Key

    I liked this book because of the pacing of the story, different twist to each page. Reminds me of Raiders of the Lost Ark. An action hero thats not to smart but smart enough to stay alive. When I finished this book I went searching for other titles by William Dietrich.

    2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted May 23, 2008

    A historical romp!

    Ethan Gage may become one of the great American fictional adventurers. Napoleon Bonaparte invades the Holy Land, Ethan Gage searches for a lost book of wisdom, and all sorts of chaos ensues. This is a fun, exciting blast of historical fiction, but the setting, the battles, the history is all true.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 9, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    a terrific historical thriller

    In 1799 he was fortunate to survive the evil of NAPOLEON'S PYRAMIDS thanks to a hot air balloon ride across the Sahara but now expatriate Ethan Gage is in danger again in the Holy Land as Napoleon¿s army march towards Jerusalem. Gage and Bonaparte had gotten into a dispute over the Great Pyramid power leading to the French dictator proclaiming him an enemy of the state.------------------ Napoleon's followers Count Alessandro Silano and his aide Pierre Najac declare Gage a dangerous traitor to France placing a price for his head. Knowing the peril he faces, Gage fears more for his former lover Astiza as a pawn if the lethal sorcerer Silano captures her. Thus he rushes to Jerusalem to keep her safe, which fits with his other quest perfectly as he follows clues in search of the revered legendary Book of Thoth, an ancient tome that allegedly knows the magical underlying secrets of the universe. ----------------- Using real persona, sites and events (not just Napoleon), William Dietrich writes a terrific historical thriller starring a late eighteenth century Hans Solo impish rogue. The story line is fast-paced but also brings alive the Holy Land. This is one series worth reading as Mr. Dietrich provides THE ROSETTA KEY to how Napoleon consolidated his power.--------- Harriet Klausner

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 1, 2012

    Good book

    This was a good book, with a quick paced story line, following directly off from Napoleon's Pyramids. It was a very quick read and I strongly recommend it to anyone who likes the series thus far. It more deserves a four and a half, or maybe four and three quarters, but the only other choice is five, so I'm going to stay with four stars, but that doesn't mean it doesn't deserve more.

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  • Posted August 24, 2010

    I Also Recommend:

    Good history great book

    What a great way to continue the series. Good ties into the previous book. A must read for history buffs.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted February 22, 2010

    Liked it.

    I really liked this book. I liked the historical aspect of it. It was quick read because it seemed to flow pretty quickly and would be a good book to take on a trip. It may have been a little better if I had read the preceding book where the characters start off, but it is a book that can stand on its own and the first book is not required to understand or enjoy this one. If you like a story with a little history and intrgue you will probably like this book.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted July 27, 2009

    A Great Story

    Ethan Gage is at it again while taking his quirkiness to the middle-east of 1800. This story is a rollicking, twisting tale of history, treasure hunting and action. A clean, fast read with likable characters and good plots lines.

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  • Posted May 3, 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Extremely Engaging and Enertaining

    Historical intrigue , action , suspense , and drama amid a thrilling story . An exhilarating ride through Napoleonic times with a cast of many characters skillfully woven into the historical fabric . Fast paced yet thorough developement stirs an unconscious desire that the book will never end . Ethan Gage is the James Bond of this exciting historical period with intriguing talents and unusual skills plied in Mission Impossible situations . A roller coaster ride through epic times among panoramic scenarios. The story cleverly involves a quest for fabled power and knowledge that draws on the mysteries of our time and their roots in past ages through the eyes and experiences of an explorer - adventurer that identifies with more of ourselves than we realize. Deeply satisfying and almost guaranteed to leave you begging for a series ; for we all want to be Ethan Gage.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 27, 2009

    charming

    This novel is a cute and charming gem if you want something that is entertaining without too much effort required on your part. The main character is funny and endearing. I listened to this on audiobook and it was great for "getting away from reality" for awhile. The story line is easy and the adventure just carries you along. The plot is a little disappointing, as the end isn't completely satisfying, but the journey is light and fun! The story does get fantastical and unbelievable at times, and it reads more like a fairy tale. But I think that's what lends it its charm.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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    Posted October 28, 2008

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