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Deception Point
Deception Point
Author: Dan Brown
Publisher: Corgi Books
Category: Book

List Price: $14.45
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 190 reviews
Sales Rank: 858939

Media: Paperback
Pages: 592
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0552151769
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780552151764
ASIN: 0552151769

Publication Date: May 1, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.

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Similar Items:

  • Digital Fortress : A Thriller
  • Angels & Demons: A Novel
  • The Da Vinci Code
  • Matter
  • Holy Blood, Holy Grail

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Penzler Pick, December 2001: In the world of page-turning thrillers, Dan Brown holds a special place in the hearts of many of us. After his first book, Digital Fortress, almost passed me by, he wrote Angels and Demons, which was probably one of the half-dozen most exciting thrillers of last year. It is a pleasure to report that his new book lives up to his reputation as a writer whose research and talent make his stories exciting, believable, and just plain unputdownable.

The time is now and President Zachary Herney is facing a very tough reelection. His opponent, Senator Sedgwick Sexton, is a powerful man with powerful friends and a mission: to reduce NASA's spending and move space exploration into the private sector. He has numerous supporters, including many beyond the businesses who will profit from this because of the embarrassment of 1996, when the Clinton administration was informed by NASA that proof existed of life on other planets. That information turned out to be premature, if not incorrect. (This story is true; I repeat, Dan Brown's research is very, very good.) The embattled president is assured that a rare object buried deep in the Arctic ice will prove to have far-reaching implications on America's space program. The find, however, needs to be verified.

Enter Rachel Sexton, a gister for the National Reconnaissance Office. Gisters reduce complex reports into single-page briefs, and in this case the president needs that confirmation before he broadcasts to the nation, probably ensuring his reelection. It's tricky because Rachel is the daughter of his opponent. Rachel is thrilled to be on the team traveling to the Arctic circle. She is a realist about her father's politics and has little respect for his stand on NASA, but Senator Sexton cannot help but have a problem with her involvement.

Adventure, romance, murder, skullduggery, and nail-biting tension ensue. By the end of Deception Point, the reader will be much better informed about how our space program works and how our politicians react to new information. Bring on the next Dan Brown thriller! --Otto Penzler

Product Description

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 U.S. 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:   Read 185 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Just okay.   October 1, 2008
It's an ok beach book. Nothing more.
But I agree with many of the criticisms I've read from other reviewers. First, the cardboard characters. Way too politically correct (Villain: white male Republican. Heroine: young, pretty intelligence analyst who outsmarts the male scientists and outfights special forces soldiers. ALternate heroine: young, pretty, black political wonk who outsmarts her aforementioned white male politician boss, and everybody else. With the aid of her female news reporter friend. You go, girls!).
Second, Brown alleges that all the technology in the book is real. I'm skeptical about the flying microbot -- at least with the degree of control to fly it into the eye of a person who is moving his head around. Also the rifle that manufactures bullets from snow or sand packed into its handle. Real -- or just on the drawing board? But I outright challenge the idea that there's an F-14 version that can fly 6,000 miles without refueling -- some of that distance on afterburner. And if Brown is not being entirely honest when he says all this is real -- I wonder what it tells me about his assurances that his most famous work also contains true accounts of historical events and organizations?



2 out of 5 stars ehhhh...if you really have nothing else going on......   September 22, 2008
I could see Steven Seagal in a movie version of this book and then I would wait until that movie was a last option on late night TNT. There were some "ok" parts of the book followed by more let downs. It's almost like Dan Brown had writers block and the publisher was screaming for the conclusion.


3 out of 5 stars Da vinci code this is not.   September 20, 2008
Dan Brown is definitely the king of the "smart novel". There is definitely alot of "jargon" in this book. Most of it geology. While I'm not sure how much of it is legit and how much isn't, I am certain that it made this novel harder to enjoy.

Spoiler Alert:
There's alot to do with chrondules. Don't know what chrondules are? Me neither, and it could seriously effect how much you enjoy this book.

It's written similar to the other Dan Brown novels. Trying to keep you on the edge of your seat with vague references to events that will completely revealed one piece at a time. This was done much better in the Da Vinci Code, and only medicore in this book.

It was enjoyable, but certainly not a must read.



4 out of 5 stars Lots of suspense...   September 11, 2008
Deception Point is a very suspenseful novel. Worth reading and is one of Dan Brown's best novels - second only to the Da Vinci Code.


4 out of 5 stars Has Some High Points But ....   September 5, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I enjoy thrillers generally and am willing to suspend belief when it comes to works of fiction, so some of the things that other reviewers mentioned about some of the reaches did not bother me that much, but some did.

This book started off very well. The first few pages had me hooked, and had to finish off. The story went well for awhile but started to tail off. I found the anciallary charactors actually more enjoyable than the main ones, with one of the scientists being particularly good alebit a bit cliche. The main charactors by and large did not "grab me" as much. The television personality was good, the senator's daughter okay (started off strong then tailed), the senator and his aid never was enamored of, the President was okay.

The book did let me down though as the action really progressed - in other words when the scientists make some further discoverys. Just a tad bit over the top. Do not want to play spoiler on this, but will leave it as that there was too much extreme things happening at convienent times with mother nature. Just a bit forced overall and some gaps in the flow of the story to me. I liked the idea and some places alot, others not so much.

Overall it was okay reading, good for plane flights, but I would recommend Brown's other books more. There there are general parallels in some plot points with the Da Vinci Code, I found the Da Vinci Code more enjoyable in terms of the writing and charactors.


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