maarti

Aarti Moradiya Moradiya من عند Bas-Gordali, Chechenskaya Republits, روسيا، 366234 من عند Bas-Gordali, Chechenskaya Republits, روسيا، 366234

قارئ Aarti Moradiya Moradiya من عند Bas-Gordali, Chechenskaya Republits, روسيا، 366234

Aarti Moradiya Moradiya من عند Bas-Gordali, Chechenskaya Republits, روسيا، 366234

maarti

This is a scary, freaky book about murder, mayhem, mysticism, torture, and very base human behavior. I found it very much in the same vein of "Last Exit To Brooklyn" by Hubert Selby Jr. It's a 'thriller' and I read it in a couple intense days. I found out about this from a Los Angeles Times on 8/21/11. It will make a fantastic rated R movie. "It's a prayer log. But it don't work"

maarti

Let me just say - it's rare I leave reviews. I only do it for books I truly do love. As an author, I understand the destructive nature a bad review can give a book, so I subscribe to the old adage, "If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything at all." Secret of the Sands has forced me to break that oath. It's a confounding book that you'd like to love but it makes you work so hard to get there that by the furious end, it leaves you winded and feeling like you worked to hard to see the resolution. Why is it so hard? Well, for one the writing style of the authors, Rai and Tavius isn't typical to my reading preference. That's not their fault. I enjoy a descriptive narrative told in an active voice, while Rai and Tavius' work is primarily telling, passive. This is not to say they don't paint a nice picture of the imagery of what's going on - but it reads at points like a report rather than a fiction tale. Secondly, the dialogue between the characters (especially those in present time) seems out of place at points and at times comically bad. Some of the characters are paper thin caricatures of evil villains past, such as the conniving assistant Fessel. The authors are much better when they flashback to Ancient Egypt, but even then its hard to picture a Queen's son in antiquity calling her "Mommy". Little things like that seemed to break you out of the story. So that's the negative. The positive and the reason I gutted through is that Secret of the Sands is a fantastic story with action, suspense, and musty dusty discoveries that amaze the mind. As Alex and Mitch sift through the clues to what the Pharom is, you're whisked back to Ancient Egypt where the old story of betrayal is interwoven with the mystical powers of an unknown origin. As you approach the end you'll notice the writing is better, tighter and at a frantic pace. It makes for fun reading that is a page turner toward the end. I'd recommend Secret of the Sands to those who love history, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Astronaut theory, or all of the above. JC De La Torre Author of Rise of the Ancients - Annuna