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The Aristotle Quest: Black Market Truth
 
 

The Aristotle Quest: Black Market Truth [Kindle Edition]

Sharon Kaye
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Review from The San Francisco Chronicle (Nov. 08)
"If you haven't recently thought much about the lost writings of Aristotle, and even if you find the philosophical dialogue a soporific literary genre, you may well find yourself inclined otherwise while devouring "Black Market Truth," a "philosophical suspense thriller" and page-turner by Sharon Kaye.

Kaye's protagonist, the sexy, stylish and worldly academic Dana McCarter, is on a quest to find out the truth about Aristotle, religion and history. Unlike most of us who have dark secrets and write sometimes factual memoirs and entertain our therapists and more tolerant friends, Dana has a paying job dedicated to the investigation of dark secrets. She is the director of an NYU institute for the study of antiquity. In this capacity, she strives to unearth the roots of Western civilization.

Does she have her own demons? Funny you should ask. She is not immune to the allure of international illegal trafficking in black market manuscripts, for one thing. And she also has a childhood past that is riddled in a spectacular mystery, about which she eventually pieces together the clues that will give her, if not peace, some self-understanding.

The trouble begins when a stranger shows up in her office with a scroll that is the lost "Eroticus" of Aristotle. But to put it another way, the trouble really began for her long ago, when Christianity was founded and Aristotle came to be misunderstood.

The action: fast-paced. The atmospherics: plentiful and appealing. Break-in at Saint Paul's Basilica in Rome. Homicide. Ravaged sarcophagus. Suave inspector. Moonlight strolls in Red Square. New York. Taxi cab intensity in city traffic. Hotel mini-bar pre-sex cocktails. Conflicted-Italian-Catholic-cop sex. Unconflicted philosopher sex. Crimson-robed malevolent Italian prelates with names reminiscent of field goal kickers and catchers of the 1950s (Giuseppe Torelli). Filthy rich villains and filthy rich nice guys. Jaw-dropping secret rituals. Dionysian cultists. Virtual world visitation. Internet Web site "Second Life" as the location of all sorts of real/imaginary shenanigans/atrocities. Muslim Jihadists. Guns, knives, car crashes, glamorous Russians. More homicide. Aristotle.

Aristotle? Yes, he is the key for brilliant, questing researcher Dana. Up until now, you see, we may have had this ancient philosopher completely wrong. The scrolls that were stolen from the sarcophagus are the missing dialogues of Aristotle, about which nothing has been previously known except for the titles, like "The Eroticus," "The Symposium" and "The Nerinthus." Now, however, they are "translated" by her, and the translations are brimming with revelations. "... the key to the future lay in the secrets of the past. [Dana] knew that was true. If it was true for individual human beings, why wouldn't it be true for civilization itself."

What these scrolls, carefully guarded and hidden for so long, teach her could potentially unsettle the foundations of Christianity. If any number of interested parties get a hold of these dialogues (that's the big if that thrillerizes this book), the world will never be the same. There are some very dangerous, creepy people who want to control this material, and Dana is a reckless enough truth-seeker that everybody is coming after her.

To be honest, Kaye's first-novel prose can be a tad earnest. Characters tend to "pronounce" and "aver" things instead of saying them. Once or twice, somebody actually "enthused." The narrator is hardly somber; still, the jokes register on the wince-ometer. Kaye also has a stylistic tic, where the thoughts of characters speaking to themselves are italicized, the equivalent of bubbled thoughts appearing over their heads.

These are small complaints, for there's plenty of intelligence and energy and excitement. The narrator's drive sweeps one along, which is especially useful when the story depends on amazing coincidences and incredible turns that never fail to occur in real life but are (supposedly) scorned in fiction.

Perhaps it is easy to like a philosopher novelist who quotes Santayana authoritatively, appends a riveting (spoiler-alerted) afterword (discoursing on philosophical and historical quandaries) as well as a simple but intelligent glossary, and has written books about the cult television show "Lost," not to mention "Philosophy for Teens," and who remarks, "What historians tend to forget in their painstaking reconstruction of the past is that the truth is stranger than fiction." If so, then "Black Market Truth" might be just what the professor assigned for a plane ride, because what we like about fiction is that sometimes stories don't have to be true to tell a truth."
—San Francisco Chronicle (Joe Di Prisco) Nov 10, 2008



"Fast-paced, daring, and very entertaining, Black Market Truth is the quirkiest of reads—a cerebral thriller.  Novelist Sharon Kaye scarcely stops for air as she weaves Dionysian cultists, Aristotle and five stolen scrolls into a rollicking tale of international intrigue, betrayal, and conspiracy."          
—Heather Pringle, Contributing Editor of Archaeology Magazine, author of The Mummy Congress, and recipient of the Science Journalism Award 

 "As inventive a resuscitation of Aristotle's lost works as The Name of the Rose. Perpetrating up-to-date terrorism in cyber-Augustan Rome, probing Aristotle's biography and (re)inventing the dialogues so as to place him at the head now of all western thought, or carving a niche for the preservation of a Dionysian cult right under our nose—Kaye's characters and their motives prove plausible in the most unpredictable ways. Dr. Dana McCarter bolts into adventure with verve and swagger. She extends high-power doctoral training in classical philosophy and paleography through all the paces. She's alluring, mostly scrupled, and sumptuously endowed with an expense account that just won't quit!"       
—Roger T. Macfarlane, Associate Professor of Classics, and Director of the Ancient Textual Imaging Group at Brigham Young University        
    


"Brings Aristotle to life in an entertaining and dramatic way."
—Michael Tierno
Author of Aristotle's Poetics for Screenwriters

"This is a rip-roaring, fast-paced detective-mystery-thriller, school of The Da Vinci Code, full of surprises: a murder opens an international hunt uncovering a sinister conspiracy to hide secrets that would undermine the foundations of Christianity. An astoundingly original way to write philosophy; a funny, sexy, hugely entertaining page-turner, extremely interesting, entirely delightful."
—Robert Martin
Professor of Philosophy, Editor of The Dalhousie Review, author of Philosophical Conversations, and There Are Two Errors in the the Title of this Book

Product Description

A secret concealed for centuries, shrouded in myth, silenced by stone.

A secret that if unleashed threatens to shake the very foundation of Western civilization.

A secret that can remain hidden no longer.

The quest begins in Rome, where a grisly murder and a plundered tomb serve to ignite perhaps the most controversial conflict in human history. Inspector Domenico Conti is charged with the task of recovering the contents of the tomb, but as he delves deeper into the investigation, he is thrust into the center of a centuries-old struggle between truth and those who would stop at nothing to conceal it. But he is not alone.

Dr. Dana McCarter, newly appointed director of the Advanced Institute for the Study of Antiquity, finds herself at the heart of the mystery when her considerable expertise in ancient Greek philosophy and her suspect involvement with the black market take her on a journey beginning in her New York University offices and sweeping around the globe—from the dark alleys of Moscow, to the rolling hills of the Italian countryside and the enigmatic relics of an ancient civilization, alive with long-kept secrets.

As the search for answers leads them through a labyrinth of conspiracy and intrigue, Dana and Domenico must question everything they believe in and decide how much they are willing to sacrifice to know the truth.

Product Details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 776 KB
  • Publisher: Parmenides Publishing; 1 edition (October 27, 2008)
  • Sold by: Amazon Digital Services
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B0029F2FFW
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Lending: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #602,390 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Must Read for Everyone!, November 12, 2008
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I absolutely loved this book! Once I started reading it, I could not put it down! I thought I might be a bit overwhelmed due to the philosophy involved but that was absolutely not the case and I found myself looking forward to the sections that explained Aristotle's "lost diaglogues". This book is a must read for anyone who loves a good story full of intrigue and suspense.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars a fun, thought-provoking novel, December 22, 2008
By 
William Irwin (Kingston, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Kaye has written a fun, thought-provoking novel. The lost dialogues of Aristotle are one of the greatest scholarly mysteries of all time, and BLACK MARKET TRUTH delivers a highly entertaining rationale for their disappearance. It's a real page-turner. I'm usually a pretty slow reader, but I whipped through in no time. Now I have to wait a year for the sequel.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Kindle edition not formatted well, May 31, 2009
This review is from: The Aristotle Quest: Black Market Truth (Kindle Edition)
In the Kindle edition, the size of the font changes oddly and there are missing or extra characters occasionally. Very annoying to read, unlike anything else I have seen on the Kindle.
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