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![Crown of Serpents (The Tununda Mysteries Book 1) by [Michael Karpovage]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51ncIiXnRNL._SY346_.jpg)
Crown of Serpents (The Tununda Mysteries Book 1) Kindle Edition
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With the discovery of a campaign journal from an American Revolutionary War officer who fought against the Iroquois Indians, the U.S. Army calls in their top field historian to assess its contents. Jake Tununda, combat vet, Freemason, and half-Seneca Indian is stunned when he gleans from the journal's cryptic Masonic passages clues to the location of an ancient shaman's crown once protected by the White Deer Society, a secret cult of his forefathers.
Jake soon realizes why his ancestors' history was best kept buried. And why peaceful, rural central New York's Finger Lakes region can be deadlier than any battlefield he had ever faced.
CROWN OF SERPENTS, a mystery thriller set in the former heartland of the Iroquois Empire, takes Jake on a fast-paced hunt to find the elusive crown and protect it. He teams up with Rae Hart, an alluring state police investigator, as they snake their way across a politically turbulent landscape marked with murder, arson, lies, and deceit. Deciphering codes, digging up war loot, and fending off the henchmen of billionaire Alex Nero, a ruthless Indian casino magnate, Jake and Rae's survival skills are put to the test. The clues to the crown ultimately lead them deep within sacred Indian caves hidden under the abandoned Seneca Army Depot where the magnitude of the crown's power is revealed.
Like CROWN OF SERPENTS? Get MAP OF THIEVES (Book Two of The Tununda Mysteries)
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateApril 8, 2009
- File size3550 KB
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Product details
- ASIN : B004AYCT2Y
- Publisher : Karpovage Creative, Inc.; 4th edition (April 8, 2009)
- Publication date : April 8, 2009
- Language : English
- File size : 3550 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Sticky notes : On Kindle Scribe
- Print length : 398 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,197,899 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #4,970 in Mystery Action Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #5,050 in War & Military Action Fiction (Kindle Store)
- #8,972 in Action Thriller Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Michael Karpovage is a native of western New York and a graduate of the Rochester Institute of Technology. He runs Karpovage Creative, Inc., a design and publishing firm for his award-winning maps and books. Michael is also historical researcher, relic hunter, lecturer, and Traveling Man of the Craft. He lives in Roswell, Georgia. Visit: www.KarpovageCreative.com
Novels:
• SKULL OF DISGUISES (2018): Book 3 of The Tununda Mysteries. A hunt for Nazi loot and a wrecked U-boat.
• MAP OF THIEVES (2014): Book 2 of The Tununda Mysteries. A hunt for lost Cherokee treasure and a secret map.
• CROWN OF SERPENTS (2009): Book 1 of The Tununda Mysteries. A hunt for an ancient Iroquois crown.
• FLASHPOINT QUEBEC (2003): Michael's first novel in the military techno-thriller genre. Out of print.
Maps:
• FRENCH QUARTER ILLUSTRATED MAP (2020). Depicts the heart of New Orleans, LA.
• CHARLESTON HISTORIC DISTRICT ILLUSTRATED MAP (2018). Depicts the heart of peninsular Charleston, SC.
• BONAVENTURE CEMETERY ILLUSTRATED MAP (2016). Savannah's most visited cemetery.
• HAUNTED SAVANNAH ILLUSTRATED MAP (2015). Savannah's hauntings and strange tales.
• SAVANNAH HISTORIC DISTRICT ILLUSTRATED MAP (2012). Depicts the heart of Savannah, GA. Awarded Best Recreational/Travel Map in the 40th Annual Cartography and Geographic Information Society (CaGIS) Map Competition (2012).
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Note that I don't really do stars. To me a book is either worth reading or it isn't. I can't rate it three-fifths worth reading! The only reason I've relented and started putting stars up there is to credit the good ones, which were being unfairly uncredited. So, all you'll ever see from me is a five-star or a one-star (since no stars isn't a rating, unfortunately).
I rated this book WORTHY!
WARNING! MAY CONTAIN UNHIDDEN SPOILERS! PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK!
Oddities:
Page 129 had some gratuitous and unnecessary objectification: "…tight black slacks and an open black overcoat revealing her service pistol holstered at her shapely waist." Seriously?
Page 265 carries the assumption that older woman not attractive! Seriously?
Yet another author doesn't get that it's 'biceps' not 'bicep'.
Jake Tununda is a Native American who is a soldier and a war hero, but he's had enough. Now he wants a quieter life and while he is still in the army, he's now working for the Military History Institute, collecting historical artifacts and oral histories, and investigating battle sites, which actually sounds like a really cool job. On his way to give a lecture and collect more information for the institute, he accidentally intercepts a call for help, and tracks down the caller to a previously unknown native American burial site which happens to be right next to limestone fissure, into which the victim has fallen.
Jake tries to rescue him, but discovers, once he gets down in there, that the vic died from his injuries. Jake thinks he's all done here once the authorities have taken over and he's given his statement, but his next port of call - to a museum to investigate a newly-discovered and major historical artifact from the revolutionary war, brings him into conflict with a powerful and dangerous native American known as Alex Nero - a man who started out gun-running, but now has built a huge 'respectable' fortune from running an exclusive casino on a reservation.
Jake doesn’t want to get involved in his own tribal politics and ritual history, but the more he tries to avoid it, the more he gets pulled in, and soon he's running after clues and treasure, trying to stay one step ahead of the extremely aggressive Nero, whose thugs know no restraint and no limits.
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I had some reservations (pun intended!) about yet another novel extolling native American tribal lore and spirits guides and what-not, for which I have no time, but this novel doesn't over do it. It treads carefully between a respectful view of the people, and avoiding completely dissing traditions, which I respected, so I was impressed and thrilled to finally find a novel which, although it wasn't perfect, handled the story and native American traditions without being sycophantic or maudlin.
The plot is believable and tight, and the action and adventure coming thick and fast. The book is written well for the most part, although the scenes involving Jake's growing lust for police investigator Rae were rather objectifying, but even as I started to get irritated over those, the story looped away from physical involvement and back into the action, so that was pretty much acceptable, too.
One problem with the ebook I read is that it was far too small to show the images and maps that are included in the text, so I got nothing out of those. How they would appear in a print book or on a larger format reader than my phone is an open question!
There are always some issues. In this case, for example, it made no sense that all the doors would be locked down in an abandoned army underground bunker, nor that they would contain any army materiel. The army has abandoned the base, the new owner literally just took over that same day. Why are they locked?!!!
At one point we read of a blood stain from the revolutionary war - but it certainly wouldn't be red, it would be brown! At a later point, it makes no sense that Rae wouldn't use the fact that her captors were reduced to crawling to get through a cave in pursuit of her, to disable one or more of them or to escape. When she 'accidentally' escapes, she fails to take out her opponents even when they're shooting at her and she has the advantage; then of course, it's Jake to the rescue, so it ends up making yet another woman seem like a damsel in distress who can only be helped by a guy. I didn't like that part.
For a historian, Jake has a lousy sense of how to handle historical sites and documents. He blunders in tampering with things, moving things, making no attempt whatsoever to preserve or document anything. I know he's not an archaeologist, but that's no reason for him to be an out-and-out disaster, especially given his credentials and background, so that seemed unrealistic to me.
Having said that, overall this novel was a really engrossing and entertaining story, so I consider this a worthy read.
The book opens with a chapter about the capture of this soldier, Boyd, by Iriquois and British soldiers, then carries into the present-day story. References to Boyd are sprinkled throughout the book. The plot of the book only spans a few days, during which Jake goes home to the reservation to consult with his uncle about Boyd, his diary, a herd of sacred white deer, and and an evil Indian casino operator named Alex Nero. And, at the end, there is an article about Boyd and the battle to which his diary refers, and around which the artifacts being sought are centered. That was very nice for someone like me who always heads to the encyclopedia to look up historical references and see how accurately they are woven into stories. Good writing by the author.
That said, I am not sure from whom the author gets his information about military uniforms, customs and courtesies, and protocols, but his information is largely erroneous. Moreover, the actions that the author writes earns Jake Tununda the respect of his men are, in fact, war crimes. If an Army officer ever committed those acts in combat, he or she would be court martialled, regardless of their subordinates' opinions.
While the errors relating to military protocol are understandable, holding up a violation of the Geneva Convention and Laws of War and calling it heroism is disappointing.
A note to the author - whomever advises you on the Army should really be replaced. I'm sure if you take a short trip down to Fort Gillem, you'll find Soldiers that are more that willing to help you portray LTC Tununda more accurately.
Top reviews from other countries

(almost literally!) across an old Indian burial site and meets up with Rae Hart, a police investigator.
This leads him into trying to discover more about the legends surrounding his tribe's history. He and
his Department also want to buy some historical artifacts that belonged to Boyd (a real person) when he
fought in the American war against England. Jake tangles with another Indian - rich, ruthless and sadistic
Alex Nero and his gang of thugs. Nero is hell bent on getting his hands not only on Boyd's possessions,
but on a special crown which contains satanic powers. Jake must try and get it first to keep it safe.
There was a lot of action, but there was also a lot of repetition about Boyd, his superior officers, the enemy
and the gruesome torture Boyd suffered at the hands of some Indians - despite him asking for mercy from a
fellow Freemason. There were several references to Freemasonry. Boyd left cryptic clues to buried treasure
and a cave where the crown might (or might not!) be hidden; clues which Jake and Nero race to interpret before the
other gets there.
I am sure the author did his research on the time of the war and the real-life characters involved. As in all wars
atrocities were committed by both sides. I give this book 3.5 stars.



