47 of 48 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Out Da Vincis The Da Vinci Code, May 16 2005
By paul mason "dedarkone" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Pegasus Secret (Mass Market Paperback)
Even before Loomis's THE PEGASUS KEY was published there were comparisions to Brown's bestselling novel with a similiar plot. However before readers of the Da Vinci code, and there are a few, decide that they have read this before and therefore there is no need to read THE PEGASUS KEY please read this review.
Langford Rielly is an ex-Cia agent, whose sister and nephew are killed in a firebombing. Just because Lang had changed his career to become a lawyer does not however mean he can turn a blind eye to justice, or vengeance however, and he vows to discover the reason behind their tragic deaths no matter where it leads him. The key seems to be a copy of a painting, that is a map leading to...well you will have to read this excellent book to find that out.
Loomis apparantly worked on his manuscript for a couple years at least, which should prove there is no intentional copying or mimicking here. Although the plot is similiar to Brown's Pegasus is not the first thriller to run into similiar plots, in fact Da Vinci for all its controversy is hardly the first novel to raise questions concerning church dogma. Now that I have laid to rest my defense for the plot I will focus on Loomis's excellent characterization and pacing. This is an extremely readable novel, written at a compelling fever pitch where the pages are soaked with characterization and action. Loomis flips from third person narration to first seamlessly. It has fascinating historical details which although fictional are interesting enough in that there is evident factual research at play in the story.
This novel is not extremely long and depending on readers' commitment to Loomis's storytelling can be read in a matter of days but hopefully kept on the shelf to be re-read, in fact after just finishing it I almost want to reread it immediately I enjoyed it that much.
One more thing, some may intepret this review as a dissing of Da Vinci Code and I want to assure Amazon browsers that is not my intent I also really liked Brown's novel. I just want to restate that this is an excellent alternative or addition to anyone's reading list that already contains The da Vinci Code.
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
A novel for all, July 7 2005
By six pipes - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Pegasus Secret (Mass Market Paperback)
What a pleasant surprise! A modern day treasure hunt - tracing a several centuries-old painting with hidden meanings to a present-day double murder, the pages fly by with ease.
It is obvious the author spent many hours researching this work - I checked the accuracy of the historical data presented in the book and it appears to be spot-on, which makes the novel even more believable.
Both history buffs and those who feel a little more historically-challenged alike will enjoy this read and find this book fascinating.
Dan Brown was good but Loomis is better. The book incorporates more accurate historical events than Brown could invent.
A 5-star recommendation - after all, who doesn't love a good treasure hunt?
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Eh, it's a book to read, July 24 2007
By E. McCabe "ATIS" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: The Pegasus Secret (Mass Market Paperback)
Like most of the planet, I enjoyed reading the DaVinci Code. I've also read a lot of hystorical secret thrillers since... the market is flooded with them. This particular book is a straight forward application of the formula, with the only variable being his long-since-past employment with the CIA. That is used as a literary crutch a little too often to get him out of artifically created tight spots. I found myself drifting off the read quite often loosing attention to a conversation in the reading room, or thinking about something else while reading. I become completely engrossed in a good read, so I'd have to say that didn't happen with this book. It's not horrible, and if you really like the historical thriller, it's probably a good airplane read, but to devote a weekend to it would be a waste of a good weekend. If you read it's 369 pages straight through from Friday evening, you could salvage your Saturday night and reflect on your choice say "Hmmm, the Knights Templar are at it again!". Generok