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   Summary and Book Reviews

Children of The Storm: Summary and book reviews of Children of The Storm by Elizabeth Peters, plus links to an excerpt from Children of The Storm and a biography of Elizabeth Peters.

Children of The Storm Children of The Storm
by Elizabeth Peters
Hardcover: Apr 2003,
416 pages.
Paperback: Apr 2004,
480 pages.

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Critics' Opinion:   good
Readers' Rating:  Not Rated
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Book Summary
award image A BookBrowse Favorite Book

Return once again with New York Times bestselling Grand Master Elizabeth Peters to a remarkable land of mystery, deception, and danger, where murderous intrigues swirl in the desert wind. . . .

The Great War has ended at last. No longer must archaeologist Amelia Peabody and her husband, Emerson, the distinguished Egyptologist, fear for the life of their daring son, Ramses, now free from his dangerous wartime obligations to British Intelligence. The advent of a season of joy and peace marks a time of new beginnings in Luxor, with delightful additions to the growing Emerson family and fascinating wonders waiting to be discovered beneath the shifting Egyptian sands.

But in the aftermath of conflict, evil still casts a cold shadow over this violence-scarred land. The theft of valuable antiquities from the home of a friend causes great concern in the Emerson household. Ramses's strange encounter with a woman costumed in the veil and gold crown of a goddess only deepens the mystery. And the brutal death of the suspected thief washes the unsettling affair in blood.

Amelia's investigation sets her on a terrifying collision course with an adversary more fiendish and formidable than any she has ever encountered. And in her zeal to make things right, the indomitable Amelia may be feeding the flames of a devastating firestorm that threatens the fragile lives of the tender and the innocent.

Book Reviews

Good BookBrowse
If you haven't read any of Elizabeth Peter's Amelia Peabody series set in late 19th/early 20th century Egypt, you really should give one a try - but start with one of the earlier volumes in the series.



Good  Booklist - Stephanie Zvirin
Readers who enjoy this series for its crisp repartee and interpersonal dynamics will be sufficiently entertained; those who long for more old-fashioned heroics and adventure will have to wait for the next book.

Very Good  Publishers Weekly
A fast-moving, intrigue-filled plot.... powered by evocative depictions of 1919 Egypt and the engaging voice of Amelia herself--a bright, independent woman, who relishes her role as family matriarch. Her affectionate, give-and-take relationship with her Egyptologist husband, Emerson, continues to enchant.

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