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Dust of Eden [Paperback]

Thomas Sullivan (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 4, 2004
Before the world was born, there was the Dust of Eden-blood-red earth from which all else was created. The last deposit of the mysterious dust became a viciously guarded secret...until the site was disturbed. A bit of Eden found its way into the hands of Ariel Leppa-an embittered elderly woman unaware of its ferocious power...for a time.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Onyx (May 4, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0451411382
  • ISBN-13: 978-0451411389
  • Product Dimensions: 6.8 x 4.1 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 5.6 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,177,178 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A GEM WITH MANY FACETS, May 19, 2004
By 
MW (Cincinnati) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dust of Eden (Paperback)
I read this book because it had so many different summaries that I thought there must be a lot to it. There is. I don't suppose my summary is going to catch it all either but here goes. A soldier of fortune who abandons his family in WWII flies a surplus helicopter for tourists and oil riggers about the time of the revolution in Iraq. He stumbles on a patch of sacred sand guarded by fanatics. When he is killed in a firefight, his partner sends his ashes, indistinguishable from the red sand, to his daughter in the States. Half a century later, the daughter (Ariel Leppa) is an old eccentric painter who still lives in the family's farmhouse, which has tunnels left over from Indian wars and the booze-running days of Prohibition. All this sets the scene for the dramatic night of Ariel's suicide attempt.

She has led an unhappy life as a second-hand Rose, and now her "friends" are dead and her daughter is crippled from a climbing accident. In a symbolic act she mixes the ashes of the father who abandoned her into a final painting of her daughter as she was at age 9. The daughter (Amber) comes to life. Ariel then brings back the whole gallery of people who underestimated her and makes the farmhouse a literal assisted-living facility where she controls life and death and health and everything else. This builds through each of her relationships, including her former husband, her boss and the man she really loved who jilted her. A high school teacher who doesn't want to warehouse his Alzheimer father (Martin) in the usual facilities becomes convinced the informal farmhouse community will work for his reclusive father and manipulates his way in by insinuating that he will draw attention to the facility.

Things go horribly wrong when Amber steals the red paint and hides it in a cupola on the roof where she begins to make her own amateurish renderings. Her child's imagination brings unholy things to life -- a scarecrow, a dog, birds, vermin to punish people she doesn't like. The fields and the old tunnels become infested and the farmhouse comes under siege. Mother and daughter are at war using the devices of their mismatched powers. The mother uses subtle, insidious weapons -- an old pet brought back, a second child companion exactly like Amber but threatened with extinction if she doesn't get the paint returned. The daughter creates overt monsters. Played against this are a half dozen other dramas: illusory and impossible love affairs, revenge, vanity, Martin's haunted past and his mistaking Amber for his own dead daughter. There is pathos and heroism in the final resolutions and an ending that could be an ending or not. Given the power that is unleashed in this story, there is nothing that isn't redeemable so long as the power still exists. Fans may clamor for a sequel of this one.

What doesn't come through in this plot summary is the writing skill. Sullivan's style is certainly among the best.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars scary horror novel, April 29, 2004
This review is from: Dust of Eden (Paperback)
East of Baghdad and West of Bastra exists a circle of ochre dirt guarded by three men who regard the site as the location of the Garden of Eden. Soldier of fortune Clayton Kenyon gathers a small force to steal the sacred dirt, but he dies in the attempt. A survivor sends the dirt to Kenyon's next of kin pretending it is his ashes. Many years later an elderly embittered Ariel Kenyon Leppa decides to commit suicide. However, before killing herself she uses the euchre sand that she thinks is Kenyon's ashes to paint a portrait of her daughter Amber when the child was nine years old.

When the paint dries, nine year old Amber comes to life and the forty five year old Amber confined to a wheelchair suddenly dies. A year later Denny Bryce seeks a decent nursing home to keep his father safe when he passes the Kenyan New Eden Assisted Living Center. It looks perfect as the residents seem like a family and the owner Ariel Leppa appears to be a caring person. He doesn't know that she painted residents into existence, old enemies who hurt her when they were alive. Now she uses the magic paint to turn them into whatever she wants.

THE DUST OF EDEN is a horror novel that is so scary readers will sleep with the lights on for weeks after finishing this book. No one should have the kind of power Ariel does over the lives of people she brought back from death and she is so warped and evil even her own daughter isn't safe from her. There are no heroes in Thomas Sullivan's creation only a very vicious villain and pathetic victims.

Harriet Klausner

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars What if You Could Change The World?, December 20, 2005
This review is from: Dust of Eden (Paperback)
"Dust of Eden" is a novel written on a great number of levels. For your average horror fan, there is the main story, winding its way from the desert outside Baghdad to the small assisted living community of New Eden, to the garden that first bore that name, and on to the conclusion. There are no slow moments in Sullivan's prose. The plot is as winding and sinuous as the serpent that inhabits it, and the characters come to life along the way, each in his or her own time and depth, but the curves are more like whip-cracks, flicking the reader forward in roller-coaster fashion, than they are impediments.
Still, to be drawn into the quick moving plot and stop there would not do this work justice. There are deeper relationships binding certain of the characters. There are moral and philosophical questions littering the pages and demanding at least passing attention.
There is a crater full of red dust in the desert. A small, very secret circle of men guards it to the death, as it has been since time out of mind. One man discovers that red bowl of sand by accident, and acts as men throughout history have acted. First he is curious, then he covets, and at last, when he as taken the object of his desire, he contemplates it, regrets his actions, and seeks redemption.
Though on the surface this is a novel of coincidences, beneath that is the thread of destiny. Do things happen because they happen, or is there a greater intelligence behind it? Is that intelligence malevolent, or benign? Loving, or manipulating? If that intelligence is, in fact, modeled after Man, as most organized religions would portray it, will it act in accordance with that similarity, or is there something greater and meaningful behind it all?
In "Dust of Eden," some of the sand of creation -- whether it is the stuff of which Eden was made, or the dust that it became at its destruction, is not clear - is stolen. Most of what is stolen is reclaimed, presumably by the guardians from whom it was taken, but one vessel is mailed off America disguised as the ashes of a man who died while stealing it.
The ashes end up sitting around forgotten, until the night that Ariel, an artist, remembers them on the night she has chosen to end her life. When she mixes the sand of Creation with her paints, everything changes - for her, anyway, and what follows is, I believe, a pretty accurate portrayal of Man (or Woman) as creator - how the human mind might react to ultimate power, how small the focus of their ambition could be, and how petty their handling of unthinkable control over others.
And Ariel has a daughter. Her daughter died in her forties, wheelchair bound after a rock climbing accident. Amber has returned, with the painting of her portrait, and from the daughter we get reflections of the mother, and the father, and another perspective on Creation.
Tied in with all of this, we have Martin and Denny Bryce. Martin is suffering the dementia of old age, forgetting almost daily what he has been told the day before, and the day before that. His son, Denny, loves him very much, but his own ability to provide a safe environment for his father is eroding with time, much like the older Bryce's mind. When he discovers New Eden, and bullies his father into Ariel's care, a new dynamic is introduced, and along with it a poignant portrait of the relationship between father and son, the dreams and memories that haunt the one, and the desperate efforts of the other to preserve the man who gave him life.
"The Dust of Eden" is not an easily classifiable work. The genres are, in and of themselves, not wide or forgiving enough to pigeonhole it, but the prose is powerful enough to span the borders. Highly recommended.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"Why don't you ever call me by my name anymore, Molly?" Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
portfolio bag, stolen paint, red crater, magic paints, red straw, dead crows
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New Eden, Denny Bryce, Ariel Leppa, Miss Hoverstein, Martin Bryce, Dana Novicki, Kraft Olson, Garden of Eden, Amber One, Danielle Kramer, Sir Aarfie, Amber Two, Marjorie Korpela, Amber Leppa, Get Amber, Little Canada, Beverly Swanson, Thomas Leppa, Paavo Seppanen, Red Rover, Tree of Knowledge
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