Deception Point
Deception Point book cover

Deception Point

Paperback – May 23, 2006

Price
$10.81
Format
Paperback
Pages
464
Publisher
Washington Square Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0743497466
Dimensions
5.31 x 1.16 x 8.25 inches
Weight
0.03 ounces

Description

"A master of smart thrills." -- "People""A rocket-fast thriller.... An outstanding read." -- Vince Flynn, "New York Times" bestselling author of "Consent to Kill""A taut, fast-paced, barn-burner of a book." -- "St. Petersburg Times" (FL)"Excellent.... A finely polished amalgam of action and intrigue." -- "Publishers Weekly" Dan Brown is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Origin , The Da Vinci Code , Digital Fortress , Deception Point , The Lost Symbol , Angels & Demons , and Inferno . He is a graduate of Amherst College and Phillips Exeter Academy, where he spent time as an English teacher before turning his effortsxa0to writing full-time. He lives in New England with his wife. Visit his website at DanBrown.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Toulos Restaurant, adjacent to Capitol Hill, boasts a politically incorrect menu of baby veal and horse carpaccio, making it an ironic hotspot for the quintessential Washingtonian power breakfast. This morning Toulos was busy -- a cacophony of clanking silverware, espresso machines, and cellphone conversations. The maitre d' was sneaking a sip of his morning Bloody Mary when the woman entered. He turned with a practiced smile. "Good morning," he said. "May I help you?" The woman was attractive, in her mid-thirties, wearing gray, pleated flannel pants, conservative flats, and an ivory Laura Ashley blouse. Her posture was straight -- chin raised ever so slightly -- not arrogant, just strong. The woman's hair was light brown and fashioned in Washington's most popular style -- the "anchorwoman" -- a lush feathering, curled under at the shoulders...long enough to be sexy, but short enough to remind you she was probably smarter than you. "I'm a little late," the woman said, her voice unassuming. "I have a breakfast meeting with Senator Sexton." The maitre d' felt an unexpected tingle of nerves. Senator Sedgewick Sexton. The senator was a regular here and currently one of the country's most famous men. Last week, having swept all twelve Republican primaries on Super Tuesday, the senator was virtually guaranteed his party's nomination for President of the United States. Many believed the senator had a superb chance of stealing the White House from the embattled President next fall. Lately Sexton's face seemed to be on every national magazine, his campaign slogan plastered all across America: "Stop spending. Start mending." "Senator Sexton is in his booth," the maitre d' said. "And you are?" "Rachel Sexton. His daughter." How foolish of me, he thought. The resemblance was quite apparent. The woman had the senator's penetrating eyes and refined carriage -- that polished air of resilient nobility. Clearly the senator's classic good looks had not skipped generations, although Rachel Sexton seemed to carry her blessings with a grace and humility her father could learn from. "A pleasure to have you, Ms. Sexton." As the maitre d' led the senator's daughter across the dining area, he was embarrassed by the gauntlet of male eyes following her...some discreet, others less so. Few women dined at Toulos and even fewer who looked like Rachel Sexton. "Nice body," one diner whispered. "Sexton already find himself a new wife?" "That's his daughter, you idiot," another replied. The man chuckled. "Knowing Sexton, he'd probably screw her anyway." When Rachel arrived at her father's table, the senator was on his cellphone talking loudly about one of his recent successes. He glanced up at Rachel only long enough to tap his Cartier and remind her she was late. I missed you, too, Rachel thought. Her father's first name was Thomas, although he'd adopted his middle name long ago. Rachel suspected it was because he liked the alliteration. Senator Sedgewick Sexton. The man was a silver-haired, silver-tongued political animal who had been anointed with the slick look of soap opera doctor, which seemed appropriate considering his talents of impersonation. "Rachel!" Her father clicked off his phone and stood to kiss her cheek. "Hi, Dad." She did not kiss him back. "You look exhausted." And so it begins, she thought. "I got your message. What's up?" "I can't ask my daughter out for breakfast?" Rachel had learned long ago her father seldom requested her company unless he had some ulterior motive. Sexton took a sip of coffee. "So, how are things with you?" "Busy. I see your campaign's going well." "Oh, let's not talk business." Sexton leaned across the table, lowering his voice. "How's that guy at the State Department I set you up with?" Rachel exhaled, already fighting the urge to check her watch. "Dad, I really haven't had time to call him. And I wish you'd stop trying to -- " "You've got to make time for the important things, Rachel. Without love, everything else is meaningless." A number of comebacks came to mind, but Rachel chose silence. Being the bigger person was not difficult when it came to her father. "Dad, you wanted to see me? You said this was important." "It is." Her father's eyes studied her closely. Rachel felt part of her defenses melt away under his gaze, and she cursed the man's power. The senator's eyes were his gift -- a gift Rachel suspected would probably carry him to the White House. On cue, his eyes would well with tears, and then, an instant later, they would clear, opening a window to an impassioned soul, extending a bond of trust to all. It's all about trust, her father always said. The senator had lost Rachel's years ago, but he was quickly gaining the country's. "I have a proposition for you," Senator Sexton said. "Let me guess," Rachel replied, attempting to refortify her position. "Some prominent divorcé looking for a young wife?" "Don't kid yourself, honey. You're not that young anymore." Rachel felt the familiar shrinking sensation that so often accompanied meetings with her father. "I want to throw you a life raft," he said. "I wasn't aware I was drowning." "You're not. The President is. You should jump ship before it's too late." "Haven't we had this conversation?" "Think about your future, Rachel. You can come work for me." "I hope that's not why you asked me to breakfast." The senator's veneer of calm broke ever so slightly. "Rachel, can't you see that your working for him reflects badly on me. And on my campaign." Rachel sighed. She and her father had been through this. "Dad, I don't work for the President. I haven't even met the President. I work in Fairfax, for God's sake!" "Politics is perception, Rachel. It appears you work for the President." Rachel exhaled, trying to keep her cool. "I worked too hard to get this job, Dad. I'm not quitting." The senator's eyes narrowed. "You know, sometimes your selfish attitude really -- " "Senator Sexton?" A reporter materialized beside the table. Sexton's demeanor thawed instantly. Rachel groaned and took a croissant from the basket on the table. d "Ralph Sneeden," the reporter said. "Washington Post. May I ask you a few questions?" The senator smiled, dabbing his mouth with a napkin. "My pleasure, Ralph. Just make it quick. I don't want my coffee getting cold." The reporter laughed on cue. "Of course, sir." He pulled out a minirecorder and turned it on. "Senator, your television ads call for legislation ensuring equal salaries for women in the workplace...as well as for tax cuts for new families. Can you comment on your rationale?" "Sure. I'm simply a huge fan of strong women and strong families." Rachel practically choked on her croissant. "And on the subject of families," the reporter followed up, "you talk a lot about education. You've proposed some highly controversial budget cuts in an effort to allocate more funds to our nation's schools." "I believe the children are our future." Rachel could not believe her father had sunk to quoting pop songs. "Finally, sir," the reporter said, "you've taken an enormous jump in the polls these past few weeks. The President has got to be worried. Any thoughts on your recent success?" "I think it has to do with trust. Americans are starting to see that the President cannot be trusted to make the tough decisions facing this nation. Runaway government spending is putting this country deeper in debt every day, and Americans are starting to realize that it's time to stop spending and start mending." Like a stay of execution from her father's rhetoric, the pager in Rachel's handbag went off. Normally the harsh electronic beeping was an unwelcome interruption, but at the moment, it sounded almost melodious. The senator glared indignantly at having been interrupted. Rachel fished the pager from her handbag and pressed a preset sequence of five buttons, confirming that she was indeed the person holding the pager. The beeping stopped, and the LCD began blinking. In fifteen seconds she would receive a secure text message. Sneeden grinned at the senator. "Your daughter is obviously a busy woman. It's refreshing to see you two still find time in your schedules to dine together." "As I said, family comes first." Sneeden nodded, and then his gaze hardened. "Might I ask, sir, how you and your daughter manage your conflicts of interest?" "Conflicts?" Senator Sexton cocked his head with an innocent look of confusion. "What conflicts do you mean?" Rachel glanced up, grimacing at her father's act. She knew exactly where this was headed. Damn reporters, she thought. Half of them were on political payrolls. The reporter's question was what journalists called a grapefruit -- a question that was supposed to look like a tough inquiry but was in fact a scripted favor to the senator -- a slow lob pitch that her father could line up and smash out of the park, clearing the air about a few things. "Well, sir..." The reporter coughed, feigning uneasiness over the question. "The conflict is that your daughter works for your opponent." Senator Sexton exploded in laughter, defusing the question instantly. "Ralph, first of all, the President and I are not opponents. We are simply two patriots who have different ideas about how to run the country we love." The reporter beamed. He had his sound bite. "And second?" "Second, my daughter is not employed by the President; she is employed by the intelligence community. She compiles intel reports and sends them to the White House. It's a fairly low-level position." He paused and looked at Rachel. "In fact, dear, I'm not sure you've even met the President, have you?" Rachel stared, her eyes smoldering. The beeper chirped, drawing Rachel's gaze to the incoming message on the LCD screen. -- RPRT DIRNRO STAT -- She deciphered the shorthand instantly and frowned. The message was unexpected, and most certainly bad news. At least she had her exit cue. "Gentlemen," she said. "It breaks my heart, but I have to go. I'm late for work." "Ms. Sexton," the reporter said quickly, "before you go, I was wondering if you could comment on the rumors that you called this breakfast meeting to discuss the possibility of leaving your current post to work for your father's campaign?" Rachel felt like someone had thrown hot coffee in her face. The question took her totally off guard. She looked at her father and sensed in his smirk that the question had been prepped. She wanted to climb across the table and stab him with a fork. The reporter shoved the recorder into her face. "Miss Sexton?" Rachel locked eyes with the reporter. "Ralph, or whoever the hell you are, get this straight: I have no intention of abandoning my job to work for Senator Sexton, and if you print anything to the contrary, you'll need a shoehorn to get that recorder out of your ass." The reporter's eyes widened. He clicked off his recorder, hiding a grin. "Thank you both." He disappeared. Rachel immediately regretted the outburst. She had inherited her father's temper, and she hated him for it. Smooth, Rachel. Very smooth. Her father glared disapprovingly. "You'd do well to learn some poise." Rachel began collecting her things. "This meeting is over." The senator was apparently done with her anyway. He pulled out his cellphone to make a call. " 'Bye, sweetie. Stop by the office one of these days and say hello. And get married, for God's sake. You're thirty-three years old." "Thirty- four," she snapped. "Your secretary sent a card." He clucked ruefully. "Thirty-four. Almost an old maid. You know by the time I was thirty-four, I'd already -- " "Married mom and screwed the neighbor?" The words came out louder than Rachel had intended, her voice hanging naked in an ill-timed lull. Diners nearby glanced over. Senator Sexton's eyes flash-froze, two ice-crystals boring into her. "You watch yourself, young lady." Rachel headed for the door. No, you watch yourself, senator. Copyright © 2001 by Dan Brown Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From the #1
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • The Da Vinci Code
  • ,
  • Angels & Demons,
  • and
  • Inferno
  • —now a major film directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks and Felicity Jones—comes a lightning-fast thriller about an astonishing NASA discovery that uncovers a vicious conspiracy leading all the way to the White House.
  • When a new NASA satellite spots evidence of an astonishingly rare object buried deep in the Arctic ice, the floundering space agency proclaims a much-needed victory...a victory that has profound implications for US space policy and the impending presidential election. With the Oval Office in the balance, the President dispatches White House Intelligence analyst Rachel Sexton to the Milne Ice Shelf to verify the authenticity of the find. Accompanied by a team of experts, including the charismatic academic Michael Tolland, Rachel uncovers the unthinkable: evidence of scientific trickery—a bold deception that threatens to plunge the world into controversy. But before Rachel can contact the President, she and Michael are attacked by a deadly team of assassins controlled by a mysterious power broker who will stop at nothing to hide the truth. Fleeing for their lives in an environment as desolate as it is lethal, their only hope for survival is to find out who is behind this masterful ploy. The truth, they will learn, is the most shocking deception of all. In his most thrilling novel to date, bestselling author Dan Brown transports readers from the ultrasecret National Reconnaissance Office to the towering ice shelves of the Arctic Circle, and back again to the hallways of power inside the West Wing. Heralded for masterfully intermingling science, history, and politics in his critically acclaimed thriller
  • Angels & Demons,
  • Brown has crafted another novel in which nothing is as it seems—and behind every corner is a stunning surprise.
  • Deception Point
  • is pulse-pounding fiction at its best.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(4.6K)
★★★★
25%
(3.8K)
★★★
15%
(2.3K)
★★
7%
(1.1K)
23%
(3.5K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Is there a lower rating than one star?

Well, there should be! I bought this book after enjoying the Da Vinci Code and now I know why there are libraries...to read a bad book and thus avoid paying good money for crap! The plot of this book has so many improbable and far-fetched contrivances that it should be an example in a writing course of what not to do. First off Brown has a little blurb at the beginning that states that all of the technology described in the book is real and actual today. Is that right? Remotely controlled spy drones with cameras the size of a large mosquito? Golly, I'll bet our boys in Iraq and Afghanistan wish that they had a few of those. How about rifles that shoot bullets made of ice? Brown must have missed the high school physics class that taught the rest of us about friction and the heat generated at any kind of velocity that would make a bullet lethal. Okay, how about a couple of people on an arctic ice shelf that breaks off and falls about a thousand feet into the sea? Wow! They not only survive but Rachel (the lead character) remembers that U.S. Naval submarines patrol the area so she pounds on the ice in code to summon one to their rescue. After this slow start things start to really speed up. The couple goes through many travails and assassination attempts before ending up on a ship out in the Atlantic with sharks swarming around as the bad guys descend upon them. And now we're told that if you're bleeding profusely and tossed among a host of starving sharks that you can be safe if you just pee yourself to cover the "scent" of your own blood. As another reviewer wrote: sharks don't "smell" anything, they use chemical receptors to identify enzymes associated with wounded prey. But Brown doesn't let reality or facts get in the way of a bad story so why should we? Oh, I forgot to mention that the entire storyline takes place in a period of time of 24 hours or less. This is one of only three books in my entire reading life that I seriously considered putting down before finishing. Unfortunately, I kept reading in the (forlorn) hope that some miracle would occur. It didn't. Don't buy this book, don't even waste your time checking it out from the library!

[...]
10 people found this helpful
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The #1 CONSPIRACY THRILLER for morons...

Dan Brown has some wonderful books. This is not one of them. I picked this up, due to my interest in U.S. government agencies (three letter ones), and the space program. I should have put the book back down instead of buying it.

While I don't begrudge Mr. Brown his conspiracies, I would recommend do some better research on *what* the agencies actually do, than assume. I'm sure, after I write this, the NRO will send their "hit-squad" after me. Or not.

The two main characters were decently written, action was enough to keep me reading, and the premise (while flawed) had some taste of "within the realm of cocaine-addled possibility... but using a Three Letter Agency (TLA) as the harbingers of death because a satellite program was jacked up... What?!? The U.S. govt has lost *billions* of dollars to satellite programs that don't work, break down immediately after launch or blow up on the launch pad. You don't see people dying en masse because of THOSE screw ups.

I'm a TLA purist - I do studies on the Intelligence Community and their agencies... I could even believe that the CIA has kidnapped Roswell aliens in their Langley facility... but to think the NRO (made up of lazy Air Force bluesuiters and pencil-pushing CIA geeks) could conjure up a convincing conspiracy TOGETHER... now that's definitely fiction. Save your dollars for the Da Vinci Code, Angels & Demons, or a coloring book. Put "Deception Point" back on the shelf.
5 people found this helpful
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day old french fries

Boy did this s*ck!
Good journalism gives you who what when where why and how. Good reviews tell you something about the content, story line, theme, and writing style of a book. Mash-ups online melt genres into each other. Since my brain atrophied from reading this drivel, a mashup is about all I can muster anymore.

Why? I had no intention of reading this book but was stuck in a house in Cambodia for a week with absolutely nothing else to read.

When: on the cusp of an election with an embattled but good hearted U.S. President. Exciting times!

WHAT: Deception Point tells the story of A SECRET GOVERNMENT ORGANIZATION!!! WHO: And the BRILLIANT BEAUTIFUL GIRL WHO WORKS THERE!!! I'm sorry, she isn't a girl, she's a woman, the daughter of a U.S. Senator no less. And he is an EVIL EVIL REPUBLICAN WHO IS SHALLOW AND PHONY!
Good lord, just for once I'd like for the red-herring villain to be an old fashioned democrat closet commie abortionist for a change. Shessh. The brillcreamed evil republican politician is wearing thin.

But back to the plot: Guess what? There is a HUGE GOVERNMENT CONSPIRACY! Designed to MANIPULATE DEMOCRACY!!!

It is called "global warming."

Naw, that's a cheap shot. It's called extraterrestrial life. (Yep!).

Of course, the soldiers in this piece are unthinking order following robots who kill U.S. civilians at the order of their masters. Rules of engagement anyone? Anyone?

Where: Washington, D.C., sleazy apartments and chambers of power! The Arctic: but set up at taxpayer expense as if it was a Four Seasons resort. A submarine! Of course! The Hunt for Red October! (sorry, I meant "C" not "H").

The "surprise villain" is so obvious. If you were drunk and you half remembered the list of characters, and remembered that no other one of them could ever be the shadow villain, you are left with ONE and ONLY ONE obvious "surprise" villain behind the whole thing.

Tack on a scientist as love interest for our heroine and you get a completed arc of a thriller so formulaic you think you are reading a book on first-order polynomials.

Reading this is like drinking a mug of lukewarm french-fry grease. Your brain will be dead by the end of it.

Dear Dan Brown: please give me those hours of my life back.
3 people found this helpful
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I don't understand how anyone could give this 5 stars...

I'm not going to say this was the worst book I ever read... but how anyone could give it 5 stars is beyond me. There was some suspense and some action scenes but the lack of believability is so distracting that its hard to be impacted by this book in any way. To get 5 stars a book should have to impact you somehow, or change your perspective on something or give you the chills once in a while. This book is far to shallow to do anything like that. Its not fair to compare it to Da Vinci Code, but just be aware, just becuase you liked Da Vinci Code doesn't mean you'll like this one.
3 people found this helpful
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One word: Ridiculous

I am not sure how else to describe this book. I listened to it while driving to and from work on my mp3 player and found myself rolling my eyes at the preposterous turns and twists of the plot more often than I kept them on the road. Its a quite dangerous book in that way. I understand that there is a place for fantasy in fictional writing. But Dan Brawn's fantasy in this case is so far fetched and so poorly thought through, it is hard to imagine that the action actually happens here, on Earth.
There is hardly a scene or an event in this book that is plausible. As more and more scientists and high tanking officials get killed or disappear in a span of several hours - you start to wonder - how can that stay unnoticed? Wouldn't people be looking for them? Is this a way to hide the truth by killing every single prominent figure that comes in contact with it? And what about great many people and resources that had to have been involved in setting the whole deception up? And how about blowing up a limo carrying a top-ranking government official with a missile fired off a helicopter in the middle of Washington DC? Surely everyone will attribute the accident to poor quality of DC roads and probably the unusually large pothole that caused a car to explode... or perhaps to a terrorist hiding in the shadows of FDR Memorial with a Hellfire missile.

The book denies even the slightest desire for common sense and realism to its reader. The only reason I kept on listening until the end of the book, is my curiosity to see what new nonsense will the author throw at the reader next. And to be honest - Dan Brown did not disappoint! :)
2 people found this helpful
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An Entertaining Story

Deception Point centers around a NASA discovery of a meteorite, buried deep in the ice, inside the Arctic Circle. The discovery seems to indicate, life may exist outside our planet.

I thought this book was an exciting read, for the most part. The story starts off slowly as the scene is set,and we are introduced to the main characters, but after about the 150 pages the action really starts, both in Wasington and the frozen north. Why only 3 stars? Well, two things, really. Firstly, I felt the character development was not great, and secondly, the 'good guys' seemed to have an awful lot of luck on their side, when in tricky situations.
2 people found this helpful
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Deserves Zero Stars

Someone lent me this book, and if not for that reason, I would have closed it after reading the first few pages. Apart from the ridiculous story line, this book is so poorly written that it ought to be an embarrassment to both its author and publisher, except that it make a few bucks from the author's celebrity. There are tidbits of new technology sprinkled in it, but to call this "thrilling" literature is just very wrong. It was boring, boring, boring...and predictable. And to think I had lent the other person Simon Winchester's "The Professor and the Madman" and Stieg Larsson's "The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo."
2 people found this helpful
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Could not finish

I am an avid reader and generally not too picky. This was the first book in years that I gave away without having finished it. I started and put it down several times. After about 6 months I had only read about half of it and was dreading the need to finish. I came to realize that I just did not like the book. The plot was too unbelievable and I did not care much for the characters. I have read other books by the author and could not put them down. This one just missed the mark in my opinion.
2 people found this helpful
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Let's just say I'm glad I got it for 50 cents

I would write a detailed review on why I didn't like this book, but it's not worth it to waste more time on a book that took so much of it from me already.

Suffice to say, the plot is boring and the overriding theme of NASA possibly being shut down due to the action or inaction of certain characters is duller than a roll of toilet paper. I highly doubt the possible privatization of NASA (or keeping it a government agency) is enough to keep most readers interested, and that is the focal point of the novel.

The characters are dull. Not so much characters as caricatures.

The only reason I made it though this book is because, like other Brown novels, it is so easy to read. Even though it's boring and contrived, you can easily make it through 50 pages a night and be done with it in a week. Of course, you could just skip it altogether and save yourself the anguish and frustration.
2 people found this helpful
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Decent Time Killer

Reading a Dan Brown book and giving it poor reviews based on its accuracy it like giving a Tom and Jerry cartoon a bad review becuase mice dont really hit cats with frying pans.
Yes, there are some really bad inaccuracies and "Could never happens"
Yes, the character development is not great
Yes, it follows the exact same plots as his other novels
But, you know what? I dont read thrillers for their accuracies. I dont care about the poor character development. I wanted a bit of action, a bit of suspense and a bit of imagination. I got all three. If youre looking for something taht can "truely happen", read Tom Clancy. If you just want something you can read and not have to think about and just enjoy the story for what it is, this will surely get you there.
2 people found this helpful