The Romanov Prophecy: A Novel
The Romanov Prophecy: A Novel book cover

The Romanov Prophecy: A Novel

Mass Market Paperback – November 27, 2007

Price
$9.99
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345504395
Dimensions
4.17 x 1.08 x 7.5 inches
Weight
8.8 ounces

Description

Praise for Steve Berry The Romanov Prophecy “READERS WHO ENJOY THE BOOKS OF DAN BROWN AND DANIEL SILVA WILL ENJOY THE ROMANOV PROPHECY , TOO. This is a wild roller-coaster ride, with explosive action and compelling suspense, delving into one of the great mysteries of our time.”–SHARON KAY PENMAN, author of Time and Chance The Amber Room “SEXY, ILLUMINATING, AND CONFIDENT . . . a globe-trotting treasure hunt packed with exotic locales, sumptuous art, and ruthless villains.Steve Berry writes with the self-assured style of a veteran.”–DAN BROWN, author of The Da Vinci Code “COMPELLING . . . ADVENTURE-FILLED . . . a fast-moving, globe-hopping tale of long-lost treasure and shadowy bad guys.”– San Francisco Chronicle “MAGNIFICENTLY ENGROSSING, with wonderful characters and a plot that speeds, twists, and turns. Pure intrigue, pure fun.”–CLIVE CUSSLER Ekaterinburg, Russia: July 16, 1918. Ten months have passed since Nicholas II's reign was cut short by revolutionaries. Tonight, the White Army advances on the town where the Tsar and his family are being held captive by the Bolsheviks. Nicholas dares to hope for salvation. Instead, the Romanovs are coldly and methodically executed. Moscow: Present Day. Atlanta lawyer Miles Lord, fluent in Russian and well versed in the country's history, is thrilled to be in Moscow on the eve of such a momentous event. After the fall of Communism and a succession of weak governments, the Russian people have voted to bring back the monarchy. The new tsar will be chosen from the distant relatives of Nicholas II by a specially appointed commission, and Miles' job is to perform a background check on the Tsarist candidate favored by a powerful group of Western businessmen. But research quickly becomes the least of Miles' concerns when he is nearly killed by gunmen on a city plaza. Suddenly Miles is racing across continents, shadowed by nefarious henchmen. At first, his only question is why people are pursuing him. But after a strange conversation with a mysterious Russian, who steers Miles toward the writings of Rasputin, he becomes desperate to know more-most important, "what really happened to the family of Russia's last tsar? His only companion is Akilina Petrov, a Russian circus performer sympathetic to his struggle, and his only guide is a cryptic message from Rasputin that implies that the bloody night of so long ago is not the last chapter in the Romanovs' story . . . and that someone might even have survived the massacre. The prophecy's implications are earth-shattering-not only for thefuture of the tsar and mother Russia, but also for Miles himself. Steve Berry, national bestselling author of the phenomenal thriller "The Amber Room, once again delves into rich historical fact to produce an explosive page-turner. In "The Romanov Prophecy, the authentic and the speculative meld into a fascinating and exceptionally suspenseful work of fiction. "From the Hardcover edition. Steve Berry is the New York Times and #1 internationally bestselling author of The Lincoln Myth, The King’s Deception, The Columbus Affair, The Jefferson Key, The Emperor’s Tomb, The Paris Vendetta, The Charlemagne Pursuit, The Venetian Betrayal, The Alexandria Link, The Templar Legacy, The Third Secret, The Romanov Prophecy, and The Amber Room . His books have been translated into 40 languages with more than 18,000,000 copies in 51 countries. xa0 History lies at the heart of every Steve Berry novel. It’s this passion, one he shares with his wife, Elizabeth, that led them to create History Matters, a foundation dedicated to historic preservation. Since 2009 Steve and Elizabeth have traveled across the country to save endangered historic treasures, raising money via lectures, receptions, galas, luncheons, dinners, and their popular writers’ workshops. To date, nearly 2,500 students have attended those workshops. In 2012 their work was recognized by the American Library Association, which named Steve the first spokesman for National Preservation Week. He was also appointed by the Smithsonian Board of Regents to serve on the Smithsonian Libraries Advisory Board to help promote and support the libraries in their mission to provide information in all forms to scientists, curators, scholars, students, and the public at large. He has received the Royden B. Davis Distinguished Author Award and the 2013 Writers for Writers Award from Poets & Writers . His novel The Columbus Affair earned him the Anne Frank Human Writes Award, and his historic preservation work merited the 2013 Silver Bullet from International Thriller Writers. xa0 Steve Berry was born and raised in Georgia, graduating from the Walter F. George School of Law at Mercer University. He was a trial lawyer for 30 years and held elective office for 14 of those years. He is a founding member of International Thriller Writers—a group of more than 2,600 thriller writers from around the world—and served three years as its co-president. xa0 For more information, visit www.steveberry.org. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. ONEmoscow, the present tuesday, october 12 1:24 pmIn fifteen seconds Miles Lord’s life changed forever.He first saw the sedan. A dark blue Volvo station wagon, the tint so deep that it appeared black in the bright midday sun. He next noticed the front tires cutting right, weaving a path around traffic on busy Nikolskaya Prospekt. Then the rear window, reflective as a mirror, descended, and a distorted reflection of the surrounding buildings was replaced by a dark rectangle pierced by the barrel of a gun.Bullets exploded from the gun.He dived flat. Screams arose around him as he slammed onto the oily pavement. The sidewalk was packed with afternoon shoppers, tourists, and workers, all now lunging for cover as lead raked a trail across the weathered stone of Stalinist-era buildings.He rolled over and looked up at Artemy Bely, his lunch companion. He’d met the Russian two days back and taken him to be an amicable young lawyer with the Justice Ministry. Lawyer to lawyer they’d eaten dinner last night and breakfast this morning, talking of the new Russia and the great changes coming, both marveling at being part of history. His mouth opened to shout a warning, but before he could utter a sound Bely’s chest erupted and blood and sinew splattered on the plate-glass window beyond.The automatic fire came with a constant rat-tat-tat that reminded him of old gangster movies. The plate glass gave way and jagged shards crashed to the sidewalk. Bely’s body crumpled on top of him. A coppery stench rose from the gaping wounds. He shoved the lifeless Russian off, worried about the red tide soaking into his suit and dripping from his hands. He hardly knew Bely. Was he HIV-positive?The Volvo screeched to a stop.He looked to his left.Car doors popped open and two men sprang out, both armed with automatic weapons. They wore the blue-and-gray uniforms with red lapels of the militsya—the police. Neither, though, sported the regulation gray caps with red brim. The man from the front seat had the sloped forehead, bushy hair, and bulbous nose of a Cro-Magnon. The man who slid from the rear was stocky with a pockmarked face and dark, slicked-back hair. The man’s right eye caught Lord’s attention. The space between the pupil and eyebrow was wide, creating a noticeable droop—as if one eye was closed, the other open—and provided the only indication of emotion on an otherwise expressionless face.Droopy said to Cro-Magnon in Russian, “The damn chornye survived.”Did he hear right?Chornye.The Russian equivalent for nigger.His was the only black face he’d seen since arriving in Moscow eight weeks ago, so he knew he had a problem. He recalled something from a Russian travel book he’d read a few months back. Anyone dark-skinned can expect to arouse a certain amount of curiosity. What an understatement.Cro-Magnon acknowledged the comment with a nod. The two men stood thirty yards away, and Lord wasn’t about to wait around to find out what they wanted. He sprang to his feet and raced in the opposite direction. With a quick glance over his shoulder he saw the two calmly crouch and ready themselves to shoot. An intersection loomed ahead, and he leaped the remaining distance just as gunfire blasted from behind.Bullets strafed the stone, puffing cloud bursts into the chilly air.More people dived for cover.He sprang from the sidewalk and faced a tolkuchki—street market—lining the curb as far as he could see.“Gunmen. Run,” he screamed in Russian.A bobushka peddling dolls understood instantly and shuffled to a nearby doorway, jerking tight a scarf around her weathered face. Half a dozen children hawking newspapers and Pepsis darted into a grocery. Vendors abandoned their kiosks and scattered like roaches. The appearance of the mafiya was not uncommon. He knew that a hundred or more gangs operated throughout Moscow. People being shot, knifed, or blown up had become as common as traffic jams, simply the risk of doing business on the streets.He bolted ahead into the crowded prospekt, traffic merely inching along and starting to congeal in the mayhem. A horn blared and a braking taxi stopped just short of him. His bloodied hands came down hard on the hood. The driver continued to lean on the horn. He looked back and saw the two men with guns round the corner. The crowd parted, which provided a clear shot. He dived behind the taxi as bullets obliterated the driver’s side.The horn stopped blaring.He raised himself up and stared into the driver’s bloodied face, smushed against the passenger’s-side window, one eye cocked open, the pane stained crimson. The men were now fifty yards away, on the other side of the congested prospekt. He studied the storefronts on both sides of the street and registered a men’s fashion salon, children’s clothing boutique, and several antiques galleries. He searched for someplace in which to disappear and chose McDonald’s. For some reason the golden arches harked of safety.He raced down the sidewalk and shoved open its glass doors. Several hundred people packed the chest-high tables and booths. More stood in line. He recalled that this was at one point the busiest restaurant in the world.He was gulping air fast and a scent of grilled burgers, fries, and cigarettes accompanied each breath. His hands and clothes were still bloody. Several women started to scream that he’d been shot. A panic overtook the young crowds and there was a mad push for the doors. He shouldered forward, deeper into the throng, and quickly realized this was a mistake. He pushed through the dining room toward stairs that led down to bathrooms. He slipped out of the panicked mob and skipped down the stairs three at a time, his bloodied right hand gliding across a slick iron rail.“Back. Away. Back,” deep voices ordered in Russian from above.Gunfire erupted.More screams and rushed footsteps.He found the bottom of the stairs and faced three closed doors. One led to the ladies’ room, the other to the men’s. He opened the third. A large storage room spanned before him, its walls shiny white tile like the rest of the restaurant. In one corner three people huddled around a table smoking. He noticed their T-shirts—Lenin’s face superimposed over McDonald’s golden arches. Their gazes met his.“Gunmen. Hide,” he said in Russian.Without a word, all three bolted from the table and shot toward the far end of the brightly lit room. The lead man flung open a door, and they disappeared outside. Lord stopped only an instant to slam shut the door from which he’d entered and lock it from the inside, then he followed.He dashed out into the chilly afternoon and stood in an alley behind the multistory building that accommodated the restaurant. He half expected Gypsies or bemedaled war veterans to be in residence. Every nook and cranny of Moscow seemed to provide shelter to one or another dispossessed social group.Dingy buildings surrounded him, the coarsely hewn stone blackened and scarred from decades of unregulated auto emissions. He’d often wondered what those same fumes did to lungs. He tried to get his bearings. He was about a hundred yards north of Red Square. Where was the nearest Metro station? That could be his best means of escape. There were always policemen in the stations. But policemen were chasing him. Or were they? He’d read how the mafiya many times donned police uniforms. Most times the streets were littered with police—too damn many—all sporting nightsticks and automatic weapons. Yet today he’d seen not one.A thud came from inside the building.His head whipped around.The door at the far end of the storage room leading from the bathrooms was being forced. He started running in the direction of the main street, just as gunfire echoed from inside.He found the sidewalk and turned right, running as fast as his suit would allow. He reached up, unbuttoned his collar, and yanked down his tie. Now at least he could breathe. It would only be a few moments before his pursuers rounded the corner from behind. He quickly swerved right and vaulted a waist-high, chain-link fence encircling one of the innumerable parking lots dotting Moscow’s inner ring.He slowed to a trot and let his eyes shoot left and right. The lot was full of Ladas, Chaikas, and Volgas. Some Fords. A few German sedans. Most filthy with soot and dented from abuse. He looked back. The two men had cleared the corner a hundred yards back and were now racing in his direction.He rushed forward down the center of the grassy lot. Bullets ricocheted off the cars to his right. He dived behind a dark Mitsubishi and peered around its rear bumper. The two men were positioned on the other side of the fence, Cro-Magnon standing, his gun aimed forward, Droopy still trotting toward the fence.A car engine revved.Smoke poured from the exhaust. Brake lights lit.It was a cream-colored Lada that had been parked to the opposite side of the center lane. The car quickly backed out of its space. He saw fear on the driver’s face. He’d most likely heard the bullets and decided to leave fast.Droopy jumped the fence.Lord rushed from his hiding place and vaulted onto the Lada’s hood, his hands clasping the windshield wipers. Thank heaven the damn thing had wipers. He knew most drivers kept them locked in the glove compartment to thwart thieves. The Lada’s driver gave him a startled look but kept rolling forward toward the busy boulevard. Through the rear window Lord saw Droopy, fifty yards behind, crouching to fire and Cro-Magnon scaling the fence. He thought of the taxi driver and decided it wasn’t right to involve this man. As the Lada exited onto the six-lane boulevard, he rolled off the hood and onto the sidewalk.Bullets arrived in the next second.The Lada whipped left and sped away.Lord continued to roll until he was in the street, hoping a slight depression below the curb would be enough to block Droopy’s firing angle. The earth and concrete churned as bullets dug in.A crowd waiting for a bus scattered.He glanced to his left. A bus was no more than fifty feet away and rolling toward him. Air brakes engaged. Tires squealed. The scent of sulfur exhaust was nearly suffocating. He twirled his body into the street as the bus screeched to a stop. The vehicle was now between him and the gunmen. Thank God no cars were using the boulevard’s outermost lane.He stood and darted across the six-lane road. Traffic all came one way, from the north. He crisscrossed the lanes and made a point of staying perpendicular with the bus. Halfway, he was forced to pause and wait for a line of cars to pass. There’d only be a few moments more until the gunmen rounded the bus. He took advantage of a break in traffic and ran across the final two lanes, onto the sidewalk, jumping the curb.Ahead was a busy construction site. Bare girders rose four stories into a rapidly clouding afternoon sky. He’d still not seen one policeman other than the two on his tail. Over the whirl of traffic came the roar of cranes and cement mixers. Unlike back home in Atlanta, no fences of any kind delineated the unsafe zone.He trotted onto the work site and glanced back to see the gunmen starting their own bisection of the crowded boulevard, dodging cars, horns protesting their progress. Workers milled about the construction site, paying him little attention. He wondered how many black men dressed in bloody suits ran onto the job site every day. But it was all part of the new Moscow. The safest course was surely to stay out of the way.Behind, the two gunmen found the sidewalk. They were now less than fifty yards away.Ahead, a cement mixer churned gray mortar into a steel trough as a helmeted worker monitored the progress. The trough rested on a large wooden platform chained to a cable that ran four stories up to a roof crane. The worker tending the mixture backed away and the entire assembly rose.Lord decided up was as good a place as any and raced for the ascending platform, leaping forward, gripping the platform’s bottom edge. Crusted concrete caked on the surface made it difficult to maintain a hold, but thoughts of Droopy and his pal kept his fingers secure.The platform rose, and he swung himself upward.The unbalanced movement caused a sway, chains groaning from the added weight, but he managed to climb up and flatten his body against the trough. The added weight and movement tipped everything his way, and mortar sloshed onto him.He glanced over the side.The two gunmen had seen what he did. He was fifty feet in the air and climbing. They stopped their advance and took aim. He felt the mortar-encrusted wood beneath him and stared at the steel trough.No choice.He quickly rolled into the trough, sending wet mortar oozing over the side. Cold mud enveloped him and sent a chill through his already shaking body.Gunfire started.Bullets ripped the wooden underside and pelted the trough. He shrank into the cement and heard the recoil of lead off steel.Suddenly, sirens.Coming closer.The shooting stopped.He peered out toward the boulevard and saw three police cars speeding south, his way. Apparently the gunmen had heard the sirens, too, and hastily retreated. He then saw the dark blue Volvo that had started everything appear from the north and speed down the boulevard. The two gunmen backed toward it, but seemed unable to resist a few parting shots.He watched as they finally climbed into the Volvo and roared away.Only then did he raise up on his knees and release a sigh of relief. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Ekaterinburg, Russia: July 16, 1918.
  • Ten months have passed since Nicholas II’s reign was cut short by revolutionaries. Tonight, the White Army advances on the town where the Tsar and his family are being held captive by the Bolsheviks. Nicholas dares to hope for salvation. Instead, the Romanovs are coldly and methodically executed.
  • Moscow: Present Day.
  • Atlanta lawyer Miles Lord, fluent in Russian and well versed in the country’s history, is thrilled to be in Moscow on the eve of such a momentous event. After the fall of Communism and a succession of weak governments, the Russian people have voted to bring back the monarchy. The new tsar will be chosen from the distant relatives of Nicholas II by a specially appointed commission, and Miles’ job is to perform a background check on the Tsarist candidate favored by a powerful group of Western businessmen. But research quickly becomes the least of Miles’ concerns when he is nearly killed by gunmen on a city plaza.Suddenly Miles is racing across continents, shadowed by nefarious henchmen. At first, his only question is why people are pursuing him. But after a strange conversation with a mysterious Russian, who steers Miles toward the writings of Rasputin, he becomes desperate to know more–most important,
  • what really happened to the family of Russia’s last tsar?
  • His only companion is Akilina Petrov, a Russian circus performer sympathetic to his struggle, and his only guide is a cryptic message from Rasputin that implies that the bloody night of so long ago is not the last chapter in the Romanovs’ story . . . and that someone might even have survived the massacre. The prophecy’s implications are earth-shattering–not only for the future of the tsar and mother Russia, but also for Miles himself.Steve Berry, national bestselling author of the phenomenal thriller
  • The Amber Room,
  • once again delves into rich historical fact to produce an explosive page-turner. In
  • The Romanov Prophecy,
  • the authentic and the speculative meld into a fascinating and exceptionally suspenseful work of fiction.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(467)
★★★★
25%
(389)
★★★
15%
(233)
★★
7%
(109)
23%
(357)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Gag.

OK, I can go along with the notion of Russians wanting to see the monarchy restored -- I know more than a few who feel that way. The notion of that being accomplished by a commission is something of a stretch, but hey, it's fiction -- no problem. The mafiya involvement in every aspect of Russian life -- that isn't even fiction. But, let's see, a failed Russian economy, the survival of *both* Anastasia and Alexei, the rehabilitation of Felix Yussoupov, and oh yes, let's not forget "Bloody Nicholas"...well... In an interview printed at the back of the paperback version, Steve Berry admits he first wrote this thing in 1997. Hint, Steve: If your publisher asks for your Next Great American, and you just happen to have one stashed in the drawer that was rejected by 17 major publishers (for reasons only too apparent) -- AT LEAST UPDATE THE THING. Sticking Putin's name next to Yeltsin's doesn't count as updating. There's only so much that the Fiction tag will excuse. (Oh, and your ignorance of the Russian Soul, not to mention Russian history, is too painful to be borne.)
6 people found this helpful
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Terrible

Terrible writing, grammar, plot...all around awful reading experience.

Don't waste your time on this, I got it from the library and the person before me was correcting Berry's numerous grammatical errors with a pencil!

Some of the plot devices were straight rip-offs from other novels...but that's fine, nothing is original any more. But the way he goes about using the plot devices is flat out laughable.

Also this might be the most stupid main character I have ever had the displeasure of following. Lord is a ninny. The way he refuses to realize who can or cannot trust is baffling.
3 people found this helpful
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Decent paced novel

I have read several of Steve Berry's books and this one is a pretty good page turner. It's a well crafted idea inspired from old Russian legends and conspiracy theories. The characters are believeable but I have to say that I thought Miles Lord just didn't get it. He didn't seem to notice the obvious (when it came to his nemesis) although everyone around him did.

One thing that Berry does is replay the same scenes using different vantage points. Maybe it is used more frquently than I think but his are the only books I've read that do that. It's an effective technique.

Overall the book is a fairly enjoyable ride. A new copy is a good buy but even a better buy would be some of these used copies selling for some spare change.
3 people found this helpful
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Terrible writing

The cover of the book says "Steve Berry pulls a Dan Brown". Is that supposed to be a compliment? Dan Brown is almost as bad a writer.

In the hands of a more capable writer this could have been a very good book. Too bad John Grisham does not write historical novels. Darn.

This guy cannot write believable conversations or create characters with personality. His descriptions of action scenes are clumsy and lack realism, at best - you'll growl "Oh, come on!" in disbelief. He also gets many Russian names wrong. Orleg? Zivon? Gimme a break.

Regarding the subject of the book - I am no expert on Russian history or politics, but is it not utterly ludicrous that a Czar can be elected? And that he can become an all-powerful autocrap (uh, excuse me - autocrat) just like that? And the ruling government backed with the army will step aside just like that? Makes you want to shout NYET!

Despite the interesting subject matter, these flaws make the book impossible to read and put it in the junk literature category. If you can pick it up for 50 cents, like I did, you can afford to try it and throw it out, Please using recycling.
2 people found this helpful
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The Romanov Prophesy

This was a fun idea - carrying forward the great mystery of what happened to the heirs to the Russian Throne - Anastasia and Alexis. For those of us raised on the story of Anastasia this completion of the story is long overdue - if a bit contrived and weak in terms of the mystery part of the story.

The Romanov Prophecy takes place in contemporary Russia. The Russian people are fed up with the mafia dominated oligarchy and poverty stricken life that has come to typify the post-communism era, and have decided to restore the old monarchy to the closest living Romanov heir. A 17 Tsarist Commission has been appointed to find the "true" tsar. Stefan Baklanov seems to be the frontrunner. A greedy, useless man he is dominated by a secret cabal comprised of the dominant factions in today's Russia and backed a group of American businessmen with companies in Russia. Their ultimate goal is to make sure Stefan assumes the throne. The Americans supervise the plot through a US law firm, Pridgen and Woodworth.

Miles Lord, is an African American lawyer from South Carolina who has long studied Russian history and language. An employee of Pridgen and Woodworth, his job is to research the Russian archives to see if anything in them might affect Baklanov's claim to the throne. Lord stumbles on some old letters that suggest that several of Nicholas and Alexandra's children survived the massacre in Yekaterinburg. Therein hangs the tale. Following a number of attempts on Lord's life, he is helped his would be assassins by the beautiful acrobat in the Russian Circus, Akilina Petrovna. They join forces and are helped by a secret Tsarist organization to fulfill an ancient prophesy and uncover the true secret of the Romanov survivor's fate.

The basic idea of The Romanov Prophesy is marvelous, it's a fast read and almost all of it is too contrived. For example climbing into a gorilla cage at the zoo in which the animal relieves Lord of his sweater (with a tracking device in it) and at the same time smashing the invaluable Faberge Egg (which they would never have smashed) to reveal the clue inside. In addition, Lord is supposed to be a smart enough to solve this enigma but too dumb to figure out that his boss is implicated in the plot. Suspending disbelief was difficult, the plot got annoying from time to time, and I found myself skipping a lot at the end. The mystery wasn't surprising enough but the history was great fun.

Joan Meijer
Author of Tranquillity Initiative
2 people found this helpful
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Must be his first

For Steve Berry, the search is the thing. This could not be more true for the main characters are poorly developed. The hero Miles Lord is black because he has to be (read the book) and he is totally unbelievable as is his boss - and villain - Taylor Hayes. Lord is pursued by a trio of bad guys who makes the three stooges seem like Elliot Ness. If these guys had failed, most authors would have had their bosses kill them off after the first miss rather than transport them halfway around the world to fail for the umpteenth time. What should be dramatic becomes truly funny. The search for the Romanov's shows Berry's lack of skill at this point in is career.
2 people found this helpful
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There are no words to describe it!

This book deserves a hundred Stars. I read this book blindly knowing nothing about what I was about to get into. Maybe I did not read any flap covers inside flap covers Etc. I had no idea that Miles was an African American man. I had no idea of nothing. I stumbled across this book because I am extremely interested in history. And I learned about the Romanov family when I was in high school and it was one of the stories that compelled me as a child and stayed with me as an adult. When I saw the word Romanov I just immediately grabbed it and began to read the prologue. The book was used and there was no cover on it. Normally that would be a problem with me. But I'm glad in this case because I was completely shocked and surprised about miles Lord. The book is phenomenal the story is phenomenal it's breathtaking from beginning to end I literally binge red the first half of the book. I should have been been in bed asleep LOL. This is the kind of story that stays with you after you've read it. It stays in your mind and you think. It's so well-written that you think you were watching a movie because everything is so well described that it gives you a clear visual in your head I would love to see this on DVD with nothing changed I mean literally nothing added and nothing taken away. This book was written in 2004 I believe or published in 2004 and here it is 2018 and I'm just now finding out about it. It's amazing sometimes how long it can take for a great story to be discovered and for a great writer to be discovered.
1 people found this helpful
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Another Terrific Berry Historical/Fiction Syory

An excellent story! - Especially interesting, as I had visited Russia in 2005. The idea that one of the Romanov family might have survived, and a descendent be living is fascinating, and I felt very satisfied with the novel's conclusion. Berry has a real knack for this sort of historical fiction!
1 people found this helpful
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On the Lam in Russia

Communism has failed, Democracy isn't working, so the Russians have decided they need a new tsar and they've set up a commission to oversee the his selection which is supposed to guarantee that the process conforms to conditions set up centuries earlier. The Russians have gone to the prestigious Atlanta law firm of Pridgen & Woodworth for help and to verify the Romanov credentials of Stefan Baklanov, who is one of the candidates.

Stephen Lord and his long time mentor Taylor Hayes, who is a senior partner of Pridgen & Woodworth, are the firm's lawyers on the spot. However, unknown to Hayes, he's discovered information that will knock Baklanov out of the running and change history.

As the novel opens, Lord hears gunfire and he hits the deck, then he sees two policemen exit a car and overhears them say that the damn black man (they don't say it so nicely) survived. Lord, speaks fluent Russian, but prefers to keep it to himself, and since he's is the only black man he knows of in Moscow, he decides to hit the ground running. He leads the assassins on a chase that gets four Moscovites killed in the hail of bullets that rains around him. He barely escapes with his life and once back at his hotel, he tells Taylor about his very bad morning, however Taylor isn't all that surprised. Why? You guessed it, he's in on the dastardly plot to rig the selection process and to get rid of Lord before he can muck things up.

So now we have Lord on the lam. He teams up with a woman, of course, and together they're on the run from a secret society known as the Holy Band as they try and unravel secrets from the past that will shape the future and maybe they'll even discover a missing Romonav.

Lots of thrills and chills in this story that I couldn't put down. When I first read the "Amber Room" I didn't think Mr. Berry would be able to top it. I was wrong. This is a first rate thriller destined to be on the best seller list for a very long time.
1 people found this helpful
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Fast-paced and hard to put down!

Miles Lord is an Associate Attorney from Atlanta working with a commission in Russia to restore the tsar. When he comes across some documents that certain high-powered people don't want discovered, he winds up on a run for his life as well as a quest that takes him around the globe searching for answers that have been hidden for almost 100 years.

Steve Berry throws the reader directly into the action. Every night I found myself reading a lot later than I intended because I wanted to know what happened next. The only thing I didn't like was that the author told us from nearly the beginning who was betraying Lord's trust, and I kept thinking he was dumb to trust that guy after everything that happened, but then I'd realize I might not even be suspicious of that guy if I didn't know he was a bad guy. I somewhat think it might have better if the writer had kept us guessing as to how Lord's movements were being tracked.

I recommend it to anyone who likes a good conspiracy novel.
1 people found this helpful