Ethan Gage wants to enjoy the fruits of victory after helping Napoleon win the Battle of Marengo. But an ill-advised tryst with Bonaparte's married sister has made that impossible. And the fantastic schemes of the wild Norwegian Magnus Bloodhammer soon have Ethan dodging hostile Indians on America's frontier.
With President Thomas Jefferson's blessings, Ethan and Magnus embark upon an expedition into the western wilderness—keeping their eyes open for woolly mammoths. But another prize secretly impels them: the mythical hammer of the Norse god Thor, allegedly carried to North America more than a century before Columbus. Across a landscape no white man has ever traversed, Gage's skills will be tested as never before—as he braves unimaginable peril en route to the most incredible discovery of all time.
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Ethan Gage, the expatriate American who starred in The Rosetta Key (2007) and Napoleon’s Pyramids (2008), returns for another adventure. The story, which takes place in 1800, finds Ethan joining forces with a Norwegian, the splendidly named Magnus Bloodhammer, to find Thor’s Hammer, the possibly mythical artifact that, so the legend goes, enables its possessor to control the weather. The quest takes Ethan back home, to America, where he once again follows a twisting path to an uncertain conclusion. If there weren’t already an Indiana Jones, Dietrich’s Ethan Gage could certainly fit the bill: he’s a likable risk-taker who, in his quests for priceless antiquities, has a knack for narrowly escaping near-certain death. Dietrich does an excellent job of creating the historical settings of the novels, and the real-life characters Ethan meets along the way (in this novel, it’s Thomas Jefferson) feel just right—not historically accurate but labored creations but real people. A spirited installment of what promises to be a long-running series. --David Pitt
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
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.
I was wandering through a used bookstore and came across one of Mr. Dietrich's novels, Napoleon's Pyramids. It looked interesting so I gave it a go and couldn't put it down once I started. I quickly ran out and bought The Rosetta Key, thoroughly enjoyed that, then bought The Dakota Cipher brand-spanking new from Amazon.
Ethan Gage is an American adventurer, rogue, and really all-around good guy seeking fame and fortune for number one, when he is thrust, albeit unwillingly, into horrible and deadly situations not of his making.
I've read a lot of reviews that good folks have posted on here about all kinds of books, and some of those good people just analyze the crap out of the whole book. I read for fun and enjoyment, and Dietrich has injected fun and adventurous fictional life in the form of Ethan Gage into real history. Who cares if it's not totally accurate? It's easy to become invested in the characters and wonder what's going to happen next. The historical detail of people and places is very interesting without leaning too far towards history lessons, and the adventures and artifacts are plausible enough to believe in. I'm ready to pre-order the next Ethan Gage adventure right now. He's stuck out in the wilds of an unexplored United States right now; where will he go next?
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Ethan Gage is enjoying his stay in Paris as Napoleon has forgiven him for the Battle at Acre. His goal is to enjoy the Emperor's married sister Pauline. However, after spending a delightful night with Pauline, thugs kidnap Ethan and tie him up to some fireworks. Thanks to melted chocolate in his sleeves and luck, he escapes and looks like a hero to the crowd as he appears to be holding the torch of liberty during the gala. With Pauline's help, accompanied by Norwegian freedom fighter Magnus Bloodhammer, who seeks Thor's Hammer to free his people from the Danes, he escapes to America.
The French who reclaimed the Louisiana Territory and President Jefferson want Gage to explore beyond the Great Lakes. A reluctant Ethan and Magnus begin the journey from DC to Detroit and from there across the Great Lakes towards the un-chartered Northwest in search of blue eyed light skin Indians, woolly mammoths and Thor's Hammer; allegedly brought by Knights Templar in the fourteenth century.
This fast-paced historical thriller engages readers from the moment that Ethan knows it is time to say au revoir and never slows down as he and the Odin look alike Magnus make the westward journey before Lewis and Clark. The story line is filled with action even when Ethan has them resting in New York waiting for the election of 1800 to be decided. The contrast between Magnus and Ethan is incredible as the former is dedicated to his quest and the memory of his beloved late wife while the latter is dedicated to the woman of the moment; in fact Gage's womanizing gets him into one dangerous predicament after another whether it is in France or on the Great Lakes and beyond. Readers will relish his coming home escapades while newcomers will seek his previous adventures overseas (see NAPOLEON'S PYRAMID and THE ROSETTA KEY).
Harriet Klausner
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This review is from: The Dakota Cipher (Ethan Gage Adventures) (Mass Market Paperback)
. . . this one was, I believe, the weakest.
This being said, once again, William Dietrich has produced a fun and frolicking read.
Unlike the previous two novels (and the fourth) the bulk of this novel takes place in North America. Our accidental hero, engaged in an illicit romance with Napoleon's married sister, is sent to the United States as sort of a "back-door" operative between Napoleon and the new American President, Thomas Jefferson. Once again, Gage finds himself with odd companions (an eccentric -- to say the least -- Norwegian) looking for an ancient artifact of power. And once again, Gage finds himself pursued by the members of the rather diabolical Egyptian Rite. In "The Dakota Cipher" we are also introduced to characters who will turn up again in "The Barbary Pirates".
No, this is not high literature, and should not be mistaken for such. But it is a fun adventure story -- and there is certainly nothing wrong with that!
Enjoyed and recommended!
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