The Hippopotamus Pool: An Amelia Peabody Mystery (Book 8)
by Elizabeth Peterspublished
June 1st 1997
(first published 1996)
by Warner Books
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binding
Mass Market Paperback, 448 pages
characters
setting
Egypt
isbn
0446603988
(isbn13: 9780446603980)
description
A menacing cloud hangs over the eighth adventure of 19th-century archeologists Amelia Peabody and her husband, Radcliffe Emerson (seen before in The S...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 896)
bookshelves:
historical,
mystery,
read2006
Read in February, 2006
A classic Amelia Peabody mystery. We get a few interesting twists in this one : Evelyn and Walter join Amelia and Emerson in the search for a Queen's royal Tomb and Amelia picks up two other stray : Sir Edward a young man who no doubt will turn up again much like O'Connell the journalist and David the young Egyptian boy who becomes Ramses blood brother. The Egyptology part was interesting, a bit too much of fluffy fill out for my taste in this one. Still not a bad read but I won't be getting int...more
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Read in July, 2008
It's a re-read. All of the Amelia Peabody books are wonderful, even though often I have trouble remembering what happened in which book. Or really anything that happened in any of the books. But Julia can both place any event to the very chapter of the correct book and remember intimate details about any given book, so maybe that's just me--mystery generally isn't my genre. But I do love Amelia Peabody.
I'll write more about The Hippopotamus Pool itself when I finish it again.
I'll write more about The Hippopotamus Pool itself when I finish it again.
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bookshelves:
scifi-fantasy
recommends it for:
people who enjoy fluff and don't mind bad writing...and that's ok
One of my friends says that a story is a forest and the writing is the path. No matter how pretty the forest is, you won't enjoy it if you stumble over a rock or a branch every few moments.
If that's so, this book has some of the rockiest writing I've ever seen - I couldn't even get through it. The attempts at Victorian dialogue are painful and overdone, and I never want to see a pause expressed by "er.." again.
If that's so, this book has some of the rockiest writing I've ever seen - I couldn't even get through it. The attempts at Victorian dialogue are painful and overdone, and I never want to see a pause expressed by "er.." again.
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2 comments
bookshelves:
mystery
Read in May, 2008
i aDORE these books. possibly because i listen to them on my ipod and the reader is fantastic. she finds amelia's voice from the start and just goes for it. i swear, ms peters is writing these half with the (audio) reader in mind. these are fun, easy mysteries that build upon each other. start at the beginning and follow amelia, emerson, ramses, and the whole gang on a fun egyptian holiday.
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I'm going to cheat and copy and paste my review of this series to all of the books that I have read from it.
The Amelia Peabody books are amazing. Well written and funny in a subtle sort of way. These are usually the books sitting on my nightstand that I cozy up with before bed. Sometimes I do need to take a break and read a different book, then come back to the series.
The Amelia Peabody books are amazing. Well written and funny in a subtle sort of way. These are usually the books sitting on my nightstand that I cozy up with before bed. Sometimes I do need to take a break and read a different book, then come back to the series.
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