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The Barbary Pirates: An Ethan Gage Adventure (Ethan Gage Adventures)
 
 
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The Barbary Pirates: An Ethan Gage Adventure (Ethan Gage Adventures) [Hardcover]

William Dietrich (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (50 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Ethan Gage Adventures March 30, 2010

As dazzling and action packed as the best novels of James Rollins, George MacDonald Fraser, and Steve Berry, The Barbary Pirates will have readers cheering for William Dietrich and his dashing hero, Ethan Gage!

Swashbuckling American explorer and ladies' man Ethan Gage has seen his fair share of danger, having braved the sands of Egypt, the perils of the Atlantic Ocean, and the harsh wilderness of early America. Once more, he finds himself in a desperate race—this time with the Barbary Pirates, a powerful band of Muslim outlaws from North Africa. Also after Ethan is his nemesis—and former lover—Aurora Somerset, member of a dangerous sect called the Egyptian Rite. The prize is the Mirror of Archimedes, an ancient superweapon that, according to legend, once burned a Roman fleet with its power. In 1802, this death ray could tip the balance of power in the Mediterranean, and Ethan must stop the pirates from using it against the American, English, and French fleets.

From the salons and brothels of the Palais Royal of Paris, where the quest for information about his lost love Astiza involves real-life scientists and engineers—including inventor Robert Fulton—Ethan must travel at Napoleon's behest to the canals of Venice, the caves of Santorini, the dungeons of Tripoli, and finally to treachery on the high seas in the Mediterranean.

Can Ethan rescue Astiza without betraying the cause of his own United States? Can he save the two-year-old son he only recently discovered he had without allowing the Egyptian Rite to finally dominate the world? And when the sun rises on the Mirror of Archimedes, will everything Ethan cares about be set afire?

Delivering the fast-paced adventure, uncanny wit, and page-turning historical excitement that readers have come to expect from the masterful William Dietrich, The Barbary Pirates is Ethan Gage at his winningest, most hilarious, and most death defying.

--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.

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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Ethan Gage, the early-nineteenth-century’s answer to Indiana Jones, is hot on the trail of another priceless artifact. This time it’s the Mirror of Archimedes, the (possibly mythical) ancient weapon that wiped out a Roman fleet and could enable its possessor to conquer the world. As usual the story moves at a brisk clip and contains equal parts humor, romance, and action. Ethan, a thoroughly likable adventurer, comes up against one obstacle after another as he travels from France to Greece to Italy, staying one step—sometimes barely that—ahead of the nasty pirates who want the mirror for themselves. As he did in previous novels, Dietrich works real characters and historical events into the mix, expertly blending fact and fiction. Fans of the earlier Gage novels will definitely want to read this one, but the book should be heartily recommended to all action-adventure lovers. --David Pitt

Review

“As satisfying as an Indiana Jones film and offers enough historical knowledge to render the reader a fascinating raconteur on the topics of ancient Egypt and Napoleon Bonaparte.” (USA Today )

“Gage has many of the same moves as the late George MacDonald Fraser’s irresistible anti-hero, Sir Harry Flashman.” (Sacramento Bee )

“What a surprisingly fun book! . . . I normally don’t read historical fiction . . . but The Barbary Pirates has shown me what I’m missing and has me wanting to go back and read the previous Ethan Gage novels!” (Sporatic Book Reviews )

“Dietrich is an excellent writer, and fun-loving, amoral, and occasionally deadly Ethan Gage is a compelling hero who tries hard to do the right thing—if only he wasn’t so easily distracted by temptations. An action-filled romp that’s both historically accurate and great fun.” (Library Journal )

“Dietrich works real characters and historical events into the mix, expertly blending fact and fiction. Fans of the earlier Gage novels will definitely want to read this one, but the book should be heartily recommended to all action-adventure lovers.” (Booklist )

“Attention to those of you who like thrillers to be high-concept, historical and swash-buckling!” (Daily News )

“[Dietrich’s] most successful novel yet -- a puzzle-laden page turner.” (Seattle Post-Intelligencer )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Harper; 1 edition (March 30, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0061567965
  • ISBN-13: 978-0061567964
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (50 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #489,925 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I'm a novelist and non-fiction author, with a series on American adventurer Ethan Gage in the Napoleonic era that has sold into 31 languages. My newest novel, a Nazi thriller, is "Blood of the Reich."

I began my writing career as a newspaper reporter in 1973, published my first non-fiction book, "The Final Forest," in 1992, and my first fiction, "Ice Reich," in 1998, completing a first draft on an Antarctic research ship. I share a Pulitzer for covering the Exxon Valdez oil spill while at the Seattle Times and then taught for five years at Western Washington University's Huxley College of the Environment. While there I authored "Green Fire: A History of Huxley College."

My work at HarperCollins has been historical fiction that ranges from the Roman Empire to my latest tale that ranges from Germany to Washington's Cascade Mountains to Tibet. My Ethan Gage series starts with Napoleon's invasion of Egypt ("Napoleon's Pyramids") and continues on to the Holy Land, America's Great Lakes frontier, the Barbary Pirates of North Africa and (coming) the Caribbean and Haiti. I've also done thrillers for Warner Books (Ice Reich, Getting Back, and Dark Winter, now available again as E-books on Amazon) and non-fiction about the Pacific Northwest.

My award-winning first non-fiction book, "The Final Forest," was just reissued by University of Washington Press. For any Twilight fans, it's a book about Forks, Washington, written well before the vampire craze: it gives you the real Forks.

Research for my novels has taken me to the Arctic, Antarctic, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Australia, Sicily, Greece, Paris, Britain, Hungary, Tibet...hey, someone's got to do it. I've traveled on a sailboat in the South Pacific, landed on an aircraft carrier, flown in a B-52, visited the South Pole, and been terrified flying with the Blue Angels.

As a journalist, I was a Nieman Fellow at Harvard, won National Science Foundation fellowships to Antarctica, and speak frequently on environmental issues. I've covered Congress, the eruption of Mount St. Helens, the environment, science, social issues - even the military. I've traveled frequently for my writing, but live in the Pacific Northwest where I was born. I'm married, with two grown children.

I live in a house looking out at the San Juan Islands, surrounded by fir, cedar, and hemlock, and sometimes get to watch bald eagles while I'm writing. Connecting with readers is one of life's biggest thrills.

 

Customer Reviews

50 Reviews
5 star:
 (11)
4 star:
 (26)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (2)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (50 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A Swashbuckling Adventure of Espionage and Ancient Science, March 11, 2010
This review is from: The Barbary Pirates: An Ethan Gage Adventure (Ethan Gage Adventures) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
William Dietrich's fourth installment of the adventures of American envoy and spy Ethan Gage, who tends to be a bit like Captain Jack Sparrow in the sense that is loyalities tend to lie with whoever offers the best deal, comes back strong after a weak third book that had me a little disappointed in Ethan's future.

Barbary Pirates finally wraps up some loose ends with the explanation of why Ethan has been led on a merry chase around the globe since the onset of book one, finding ancient artifacts that are being hunted down by the mysterious cult group The Egyptian Rite. Ethan's trails have led him to find Egyptian amulets, Rosetta Keys, and Thor's Hammer, all at the behest of none other than Napoleon Bonaparte. We also get to witness Ethan's reunion with his beloved Astiza whom he fell in love with in Napoleon's Pyramid, that offers up one heck of a surprise for our fumbling spy and allows us to see a different warmer and more responsible aspect of Ethan's personality that up to now tended to be quite fickle and carefree.

Napoleon has a new quest for Ethan and promises him he will help find Astiza if he accomplishes his newest mission. For Ethan, Napoleon has been both friend and foe, but has no choice but to once again bow and obey when Bonaparte retells the legend of Archimedes Death Ray war weapon, telling Gage he believes it exists on the Greek Island we now call Santorini, and also thought to be the lost island of Atlantis.

This book is packed full of great action, lots of humor, and an abundance of the usual mishaps and madcap adventures we can expect from Dietrich's Ethan Gage novels. Swashbuckling sword fights, duels and explosions, torturous dungeons and sensuous Pirate Queens, all make Barbary Pirates a fine installment, if not maybe the grand finale of this series. I love the first two books, didn't care for book three, but am very happy to say this fourth book for me was the best of the four with the grandest adventure and the one that made me laugh and smile the most.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars It's not a book it's a screenplay, March 9, 2010
By 
Peter Ingemi (Worcester County, Massachusetts United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Barbary Pirates: An Ethan Gage Adventure (Ethan Gage Adventures) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
William Dietrich's Barbary Pirates is the 4th book of the Ethan Gage series but the first that I've read. As a person very into the Barbary wars and the US navy of the time it seemed an excellent fit.

The book leaps from brothels, to Islands, to scantily clad women with grenades at a breakneck pace that really doesn't seem like a book. If you are looking for character development you have come to the wrong place, it is action, action and more action at a pace that doesn't slow up.

It read more like a screenplay than a book. I could actually see the film scenes in my head, how they would be shot, the film angles, the blasts and the dives. Pirate ships, ancient tombs, a bit of a love story and of course a mad woman with a vicious animal and Robert Fulton.

You would think that it would be a book I couldn't put down, you would be wrong. By about page 100 it reached the point where it was impossible to suspend the disbelief that is necessary for something like this to work. I found myself having to force myself to go back to the book in order to finish it.

I'm sure in a few years it will be a movie and as a movie the pace might work, but as a novel it just seemed trite.

All that being said there are some cool characters and fun moments. If the reader had a chance to breathe he might be able to appreciate them, but Dietrich give you no time to breathe, the next bomb has to go off and its time for everyone to run.

Maybe I would have liked it more if I read the previous books, but I don't know if I have the stamina for it.

It's not a bad book, I'm glad I read it but I've gotta tell you, it's like reading reading Richard Sharpe with ADHD.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars "And wise too late..", March 6, 2010
By 
Brad Baker (Atherton, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Barbary Pirates: An Ethan Gage Adventure (Ethan Gage Adventures) (Hardcover)
Customer review from the Amazon Vine™ Program (What's this?)
Bristling pirates, the blue Aegeon Sea, and a lost underground city nestled in the bosom of an ancient volcanic island. Hold on to your butts! I'm afraid he's back..."The Barbary Pirates" is Pulitzer-Prize-winning William Dietrich's fourth entry in the Ethan Gage marathon(after "The Dakota Cipher"). It continues the saga of our intrepid hero, who's now in Paris, in 1802, with his three savants, British geologist William Smith, French zoologist George Cuvier, and fellow American Robert Fulton, who invented the submarine. Gage's cronies are well armed. One has a blunderbuss, and another has just purchased a boxed set of two shiny, silver dueling pistols. Good. Adversity lies ahead. Emperor Napoleon engages all four to travel to Greece, and confound the whispers about the fabled mirror of Archimedes, a fantastic prop that can emit a death ray. Gage's old nemesis, the Egyptian Rite, a ruthless gang, is also in on the race to find the death machine. From Paris to the Mediterranean, Gage hooks up with British tigress Lady Aurora, Egyptian lover Astiza, and of course, a few pirates. In the end, Gage finds himself aboard the submarine. Somewhat predictable, and not as good as "The Dakota Cipher", "Pirates" is still a lively read; swarming with action, loaded with aphorisms. Still just looking for a job, Ethan Gage is caught up in the adventure, and he's intrigued by the medieval past, the bastion of historical truth. His quest is leading him back, "back into the fog when time began". "The Barbary Pirates" includes quotes from the scientist Archimedes, and old Ben Franklin as well. "We get old too soon and wise too late..."
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