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The Laughter of Dead Kings

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

"A royal treat....Welcome back, Vicky Bliss!...For readers new to Vicky's sassy and distinctively smart stories, The Laughter of Dead Kings will mark the start of a beautiful friendship."

—Tampa Tribune

New York Times bestselling Grand Master Elizabeth Peters—author of the thrilling fictional exploits of archaeologist Amelia Peabody in the Land of the Pharaohs—brings back beautiful, brainy art expert and sometime sleuth Vicky Bliss for one last adventure in The Laughter of Dead Kings. The incomparable Peters sends Vicky and her colorful entourage racing across modern-day Egypt to investigate the brazen theft of one the ancient desert land's most priceless treasures. Smart, funny, evocative, and suspenseful, The Laughter of Dead Kings is a fond and fitting farewell to the ever-delightful Vicky...and a superior mystery fit for a King Tutankhamen.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      It's Elizabeth Peters doing what she does best. A little intrigue, a little Egyptology, a dash of romance, all leavened with a touch of humor. Best of all it's Barbara Rosenblat doing what she does best, delivering with her usual flair this sixth Vicki Bliss book as no one else can. Rosenblat embodies all of Vicki's wit and spunk, as well as her weakness for her handsome boyfriend John, an art thief turned art dealer. You can just hear Vicki purr when John persuades her they have a few moments to "relax" before getting on to something else. Now Vicki's newfound trust in John is put to the test when their friend Feisal shows up to say that King Tut's mummy has disappeared and John is the chief suspect. D.G. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 7, 2008
      Fans of bestseller Peters's Vicky Bliss series will welcome her solid sixth suspense novel to feature the plucky art historian, last seen in Night Train to Memphis
      (1994). In Munich, where Vicky is an assistant curator at the city's National Museum, she and her longtime love, John Tregarth (formerly Sir John Smythe, notorious art thief), are shocked when their friend Feisal, the “Inspector of Antiquities for all Upper Egypt,” arrives unexpectedly and informs them that King Tut's mummy has been stolen from its tomb in the Valley of the Kings and that John is the prime suspect. Vicky and company, including her inquisitive boss, set off on a whirlwind quest beginning in Europe and ending in the Egyptian desert to clear John's name and recover the famous corpse. In compensation for a slower pace than in earlier books, Peters offers vivid descriptions of Egyptian landmarks, which will resonate with readers of the MWA Grand Master's beloved Amelia Peabody historical series.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 27, 2008
      Barbara Rosenblat is the perfect performer for a caper that whirls the listener in and out of Egyptian tombs and the glories of Luxor. Some murder and mayhem are tossed in, but they’re almost tangential. Rosenblat captures all the wit and deductive skills of Vicki Bliss, an American art curator/detective, but also conveys her down-to-earth side. However, for all her many talents, Rosenblat is surprisingly inept with foreign accents. The overblown German accent of Vicki’s boss, Schmidt, works well for the larger-than-life bon vivant, but John, Vicki’s fellow sleuth and love interest, teeters in and out of various British accents, and the Egyptian accents of the locals are totally off. Nevertheless, characters’ voices are quite distinctive, so don’t worry about getting lost in a verbal desert. Rosenblat’s overall performance and rapid-fire pacing make this overlong book more enjoyable in audio form than on the printed page. A William Morrow hardcover (Reviews, July 7).

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from December 15, 2008
      "New York Times" best-selling author Peters (www.mpmbooks.com) completes her Vicky Bliss series with this sixth title (following "Night Train to Memphis"), in which the art historian and her longtime love work to clear his name of the theft of the mummy of King Tut. Vicky's wit and spirit, along with engaging descriptions of Egyptian sights, combine to draw in even those new to the series. Audie® Award-winning narrator Barbara Rosenblat's (www.barbararosenblat.com) portrayal of Vicky is just as important to this wholly satisfying production. Her ability to inhabit the characters and her facility with dialects, accents, and emotions are singular. An essential purchase for public libraries. [Audio clip available through www.harperaudio.com; the William Morrow hc received a starred review, "LJ" 7/08.Ed.]Melody A. Moxley, Rowan P.L., Salisbury, NC

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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