Guardian of the Horizon: An Amelia Peabody Novel of Suspense
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About this ebook
Readers have long wondered what befell the Emerson clan during the years before the Great War. Now, at last, the silence is broken and the truth revealed of a perilous journey to a secret and mysterious place hidden deep in the heart of the unforgiving desert. An adventure prompted by loyalty to an endangered friend -- and spurred on by lies and treachery -- it leads Amelia Peabody and her intrepid family into a nest of vipers lying in wait at a remote mountain fortress. And when a dark past and a shocking mystery are ultimately discovered, a loved one may be lost forever.
Elizabeth Peters
Elizabeth Peters earned her Ph.D. in Egyptology from the University of Chicago’s famed Oriental Institute. During her fifty-year career, she wrote more than seventy novels and three nonfiction books on Egypt. She received numerous writing awards and, in 2012, was given the first Amelia Peabody Award, created in her honor. She died in 2013, leaving a partially completed manuscript of The Painted Queen.
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The Ape Who Guards the Balance: An Amelia Peabody Novel of Suspense Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5He Shall Thunder in the Sky: An Amelia Peabody Mystery Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Lord of the Silent: A Novel of Suspense Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Children of the Storm: An Amelia Peabody Novel of Suspense Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Painted Queen: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Guardian of the Horizon
314 ratings14 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I enjoyed this a good deal, and couldn't keep track of the plot to save my life. Barbara Rosenblatt is a great reader.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Amelia Peabody is a great character and one of my all-time favorite women in detective fiction. She's tough and funny and she's got really good politics for her early twentieth-century setting. There's always great respect and appreciation for the history and culture of Egypt.
But after all a while, all her adventures start to sound the same. This one throws in all the usual suspects, including the Master Criminal. It's fun, it's escapist, but it's pretty forgettable. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5These books enter a new dimension with the readings of Barbara Rosenblatt. She brings such wonderful characterizations to the people in the book you can imagine them as completely real. Some times I am so eager to find out what comes next I am tempted to turn to the written version but I have learned to desist. It is not the same.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the third in this series I've read - I read #1 and #2 and then suddenly skipped to #16.
I do feel like Peters made a significant effort to make sure that the reader doesn't have to read all the previous entries, however, that made for a LOT of backstory-catching-up at the outset of the book. It was very slow to get started.
However, once it finally got moving, it was a fun, light adventure involving a journey to return to visit a lost tribe in the Egyptian desert. Plots, double-crossing rogues and colorful characters abound. It's sometimes a bit silly, but Peters' extensive knowledge of Egyptology really helps her create the atmosphere of 19th-century Egypt with both accuracy and an obvious affection. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is set in 1907 more than 10 years before the events of its predecessor. Ramses, just 20, but already desperately in love with Nefret, is planning to continue his studies n in Germany to try and escape his feelings for her, but his plans are thwarted when they are recalled to the Holy Mountain in order to help Prince Tarek, whose son is dangerously ill. Its nice to read about an adventure which has been hinted at in the previous books, although knowing subsequent events does mean that there isn't any sense of jeopardy, even when Sethos puts in an appearance. Other than that though there are the usual spills and thrills, the 'magnificent musculature of Emerson's chest', murder, mayhem and parasols doesn't disappoint.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This adventure of the Emerson family was written out of chronological order in order to fill in a gap left in the story of Nefret and the Lost Oasis. It takes place in the year 1907 - 1908.When the Emersons are summoned to come to the aid of their good friend, Tarek, King of the Kingdom of the Hidden Mountain, they do not hesitate to return to Sudan to come to his aid, though they are suspicious of the messenger.When they arrive, they soon find that their suspicions were warrranted. Tarek has been usurped by one who has no right to claim the throne. The usurper plans to use Nefret and the Emersons to solidify his position.I've been reading the Amelia Peabody books in order, and was thrown off a bit at first by the out-of-synch chronology. I was soon caught up in the story, though, so that quickly ceased to be a problem, and I quite enjoyed it.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5ZERO Stars
Slogging through....this tedious over written long winded story. I really do not believe that all the minute detail is necessary. I could give a fig that Amelia insists on washing all Beasts of Burden before riding them or using them on an expedition, or that camels are especially difficult because they move, fold & kick.
More to follow..... I am skipping portions, because this is boring me.....
From Buddy Read thread: I started one of these: It is so tedious...... TMI, just get to the frolicking story already!
What an.....awful, dilettantish, trite, erudite & Utterly Predictable story. When you KNOW the person you have invited to your home is an outright dubious person and can not provide proof of who they are or satisfactorily defend their actions, then why would you follow that person into the desert, especially an remote oasis that the world knows nothing of?
I stopped @ Chapter Nine. Such snobbishness..... I didn't even like the characters. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I am positive I listened to the unabridged audiobook at some point, but I cannot remember when, and for some reason never logged it here. I generally object to abridged books, but am glad I listened to this one - the abridgment minimized the parts of this book that got so very much on my nerves. The plot dragged the characters, rather than being driven by them. I suppose that's not surprising, since the characters weren't quite themselves. It's not a terrible installment in the annals of the Peabody Emersons, but not one that shines, either.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I love this series! It's light and entertaining, if a little formulaic. The characters are fun, even if they are a little two dimensional. Great books for a lazy summer day or when you're looking for an "easy" book to read. Kind of like light Agatha Cristie Egyptian mystery.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Unlike some of the novels in this series that seem to ramble a bit, this story is tight and focused. There's plenty of twists and turns but what makes it a pleasurable read is all the interaction between the characters - particularly Ramses and Nefret. It was kind of nice to see Nefret in a more vulnerable light since she is always tough and in control all the time.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5While I found Guardian of the Horizon one of the better recent books in the series and closer to the charms and cheekiness of the earliest books, I still don't like Ramses. Why did Peters let this series become the Ramses Adventure serial? The end of chapter 11 made me put the book down for a good half hour of eewing. I don't want to know about Ramses love life. I'd rather he be seen and not heard. He's never been a well written or likeable character but had fortunately been nicely toned down for most of this book. I just wish that Peters had resisted the urge to write those "document H" fragments. The series is written from Amelia's POV and it should remain that way. Nothing is accomplished from those smoochies with Daria unless to spawn a "son of Ramses" book in the future. I shudder at the thought.So for the good bits version -- the tongue and cheek jabs at the state of Egyptology in the early 20th centure were delightful to read. I've noticed in recent Egyptology books/movies (ever since Stargate) that Budge has gone from demigod to pariah and this book takes the pariah stance. I really must find a biography of him to make up my own mind.Then there's the extreme silliness of Sethos -- another character that I'm not sure the series needs but I tolerate him. He's sort of there to poke fun at the dastardly villains of books from the turn of the 20th century. He's just there for the "Scooby Doo" ending although it would be fun to just once have a different villain.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Engaging romp through "ancient Egypt". In the style of a cinematic romantic comedy.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I usually listen to these books so I missed Barbara Rosenblatt's interpretation of Emerson's grumpy cough and Amelia's quick one liners. But I enjoyed it none the less.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I absolutely love this series, and I get the new books as soon as they're released in hardcover, but for some reason, they've been languishing in my TBR pile. I even, shockingly, found this one signed at my local BX.Interestingly, a lot of people who are fans of the series disliked this book, so I turned to Amazon reviews to figure out why. It seems that there are two major complaints: 1) it leaps backward 10 years in the series timeline, and 2) Ramses *gasp* has a love interest other than Nefret! *shock* *dismay* *palpitations*Guardian of the Horizon does go back ten years in the series timeline, filling in some blanks. The Emersons go back to the lost oasis where they first found Nefret (in The Last Camel Died at Noon), to help Tarek, whom they'd left in charge. He does indeed need their help, but not in the way the messenger sent to retrieve them said he did, and they're all in danger again.Sethos shows up, as does an arms dealer and his slave/confederate Daria, with whom Ramses imagines himself in love.I say "imagines," because Ramses is just 20 here, and the only relationship development we see is that Daria is beautiful and needs rescuing/protection--an irresistible combination for a young man, particularly since Ramses admits he's in love with Nefret.Lemme 'splain: Nefret is everything Ramses wants, but doesn't think he can have. She's intelligent, brave, and honorable, as well as beautiful... and she thinks of him as a sibling. And she doesn't need him. Then along comes Daria, who's also beautiful, but she's not anywhere near as intimidating, he doesn't have to worry about losing her friendship if she doesn't respond to his advances, and she's in need of rescue.Of course he falls for her, and of course it's not really love, even if it does feel something like it.A little pause here while I rant about romantic conventions in literature. Romantic heroes are forever turning celibate from the moment they meet The One. They're impotent with any other woman, even if they've only just glimpsed The One across a crowded room. Convention would have Ramses pining away--for all he knows, for the rest of his life. Good grief. I say kudos to Ramses for trying to get on with his life.Anyway. I loved Guardian of the Horizon. Going back in time to before Ramses and Nefret were happy and more-or-less settled was nice. I enjoyed the angst knowing that things would all work out in the end. The Lost Oasis was a nice setting to revisit, and it was fun seeing Sethos in his dual role as heroic villain/villanous hero again.