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Hardcover The Tavernier Stones [Large Print] Book

ISBN: 1410428494

ISBN13: 9781410428493

The Tavernier Stones [Large Print]

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

When the body of seventeenth-century mapmaker Johannes Cellarius floats to the surface of a bog in northern Germany with a 57-carat ruby clutched in his fist, the grisly discovery ignites a deadly... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Awesome read!!

Wonderfully written! Ability to paint a picture and draw you into the story is phenomenal... would compare to Peter Mayle "Year in Provence". Loved the use of real facts, cartography/gemology, history, places, etc. in his story, would compare this weaving of fact and fiction to that of Crichton and Dan Brown. Great characters, developed well and left me feeling like I knew them. Great Book! Think this would make a great movie! I hope he is working on another book, I'll be waiting in line to buy it:)

Loved the characters

The details in this novel--from the bogs to the stones and the story behind them, felt perfectly researched and spot on. I loved the characters in this novel . . . they felt completely three-dimensional to me, and by the end (won't post any spoilers), I was rewarded with a final scene that made this book stay with me for long after I shut the cover.

treasure maps, jewels, secret rooms--what fun!

Like many people, I enjoyed the adventure of The DaVinci Code but was annoyed by the factual errors, shallow characters, and poor writing. The Tavernier Stones provides a similarly fun read but is well written and well researched and has more interesting characters. There are a treasure map with a secret code in it, priceless gems, and hidden rooms. I had to stop reading The Tavernier Stones before bed at night because I kept staying up too late, wanting to finish "just one more chapter" and then another, and another. My one quibble with this book is that the female characters were not as well drawn as the male characters. I would have liked a female character I could have sympathized with.

cheaper than jeans, too

FIRST LINE: "There's a dead guy out there." When a very old body and an even older gem surface in a bog in northern Germany, persons worldwide realize they're the missing clues to the Tavernier stones, a lost cache of legendary jewels. Amish-born cartographer John Graf throws in his lot with scholar-turned-thief David Freeman in this modern-day treasure hunt. Together with David's gorgeous partner-in-crime Sarah, they race around the world. They don't know it, but they're up against a German Kommissar, a rival crook, and a penurious gentlewoman who bears a striking resemblance to the Wicked Witch of the West. MIDLINE You know when you find the perfect pair of jeans? It's when you try them on in the fitting room, checking from all angles, and realize, "Wow, these make my butt look amazing." That's how you'll feel about Tavernier Stones (more or less). Reading this book makes you look - and feel - amazing. Let's be honest. I wouldn't have picked up Tavernier Stones on my own. I'd read the first chapter at Book Roast (RIP), and I'd ordered a copy in support of Stephen, a friend in our 100+ person writing circle. Still, considering I'm named after a YA fantasy heroine, I didn't expect to adore this one quite so much as I did. I inhaled it - reading time: 2 hours, 47 minutes. Stephen Parrish, much like a snake charmer, coaxed me out of literary complacency with a novel of intelligence and wit (o, the wit; the startling humor!) As a lover of YA, I'm suspect of harsh, bitter writing. Parrish's writing can be mellifluous, almost poetic. He's not permanently jaded about the human condition, as evidenced by this early, poetic statement about John Graf: His eyes stared frankly and uncritically, and if he made people feel transparent, he compensated by finding no flaws in their vitreous souls. Of course, as a theologian, I'm suspect when religion garners mention on the book jacket. Parrish, however, dealt justly with the Amish faith and culture. As an intellectual, I'm suspect when mathematics code takes an entire chapter. Parrish keeps the pace going. The plot doesn't lag even in the chapters featuring pigpen cipher. Plus, I congratulated myself after I puzzled my way through the clues (with Parrish's omnipresent guidance). I'm afraid one particular strength of this novel will be overlooked, because it's so seamlessly and naturally assumed in Parrish's writing: its organic feminism. For example, Parrish could have flattened Sarah (Smith) Sainte-James into a caricature pancake. (And the one character who is flattened - literally - defies gender stereotypes.) Instead we see, as Graf does, through to Sarah's potential. As she develops her own strength, she realizes this is who she could have been all along. I liked Sarah, by the end (despite the fact that she's responsible for the worst romantic choice since Jo picked Dr. Baer over Laurie.) BOTTOM LINE If your favorite authors include Danielle Steele, Stephanie Meyer or Sarah Dessen, this is not a

A Jewel of a Novel

Propelled by a spectacular opening, in which the corpse of seventeenth-century mapmaker Johannes Cellarius is discovered in a bog with a 57-carat ruby clutched in his fist, THE TAVERNIER STONES quickly unfolds into a treasure hunt adventure even more riveting than the real-life story of the jewels which spawned it. With its effortless weaving of memorable characters--each harboring his or her motive for coveting the stones--and intricate subplots, I found this novel to be an immensely satisfying and enjoyable read. While the ingenuous ending left me hungry for more from this gifted debut author whose writing is as accomplished as his storytelling. Parrish incorporates an impressive depth of knowledge about cartography, cryptology, gemstones, and history, and his technical command of these details lends a precious believability to the hunt that is foundational to the book's success. While tension-filled and plenty thrilling, the action never veers off into the realm of the cartoonish, as Parrish grounds us so believably in his world of maps, codes, Amish culture, German lore, and, of course, precious jewels. I love a book where I learn as much as I'm entertained. Especially when the subject matter is as rich as this. But none of that stuff would mean much without characters that live and breathe on the page. And live they do. Amish-born cartographer John Graf's struggle between the religious and familial roots he's severed and the worldly quest which becomes his obsession serves as the heart of this novel, and is deftly handled by the author. I was really invested in this character, and was pleasantly and poignantly surprised by where Parrish takes him. While his relationship of necessity with jewel thief David Freeman and his girlfriend, Sarah Sainte-James, crackles with a wit and spark that keeps the pages turning. To sum up, I tore through THE TAVERNIER STONES in a couple days. And I guess that's the best recommendation of all. Parrish is the real deal.
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