Steve Berry's first ever eBook exclusive short story finds an adventurer in a strange and forbidding land, in search of a long lost treasure, and very much in harm's way.As a favor to enigmatic billionaire Henrik Thorvaldsen, Cassiopeia Vitt treks into Bulgaria's Rila mountains in search of a buried stash of exceedingly rare artifacts from a bygone the ancient tomb of a Thracian king. But when her presence is discovered by a shadowy group of Russians secretly mining the area, she needs a way out. Who to trust becomes the question, and her life depends on choosing the right option.Includes a sneak-preview of the Cotton Malone thrillers The Emperor's Tomb and The Columbus Affair.
This isn't badly written, but it does seem a bit useless as a stand alone short. It easily could have been incorporated into the prologue to The Emperor's Tomb, which this is a prequel to. I appreciate the backstory, but the plot seemed too convenient and it only made me want to see a full length novel about Thracian treasures.
You won't miss anything in The Emperor's Tomb If you don't read this first.
This was a short story that is a prequel to The Emperor's Tomb. However, I did not feel it added a lot and it is not necessary to read it before you read the novel.
So I read The Emporer's Tomb a while ago, and I understand this is a prequel to that story from Cassiopia's perspective.
I really love Steve Berry's books, and his ability to create a story around any subject that doesn't really have definite facts. But I felt this story was written just to fill in some space between novels. I think it could have easily been a chapter or intro to a book, not a story by itself.
Again, I love Berry but am disappointed in this short story.
A very short and not that great of a novella. Revolves around Cassiopeia Vitt and her exploration of an ancient tomb. Once in the tomb she runs into some Russian operatives that have come across some uranium. I wouldn't recommend this story story unless you feel the need to read all of the Cotton Malone series. Especially because Cotton isn't even in this book
A very exciting short story by Steve Berry. I've really enjoyed everything I've read by him. If you lie historical novels then you need to read his books
This is a very short story that is a prequel to The Emperor's Tomb. It also has a preview of The Emperor's Tomb.
I was kind of disappointed that so much of this was the preview rather than the short story. That being said, it does explain the background between Cassiopeia Vitt and Lev Sokolov. It's well-written and definitely whets your appetite for more.
A prequel to The Emperor’s Tomb which gives you background story of Cassiopeia Vitt and Lev Sokolo, who I guess play a large role in that book. I just thought why the need for a 30 pager, which could have been the prologue of TET…it’s like the publishers just wanted to make more money!!!!
Despite that, I love anything about Cassiopeia, Cotton Malone’s friend and who is one of my favourite characters in this series and I did love seeing her kick ass with the bad guys.
This is a prequel to "The Emperor's Tomb" which I had already read. It is a short short story, but a little too short for my taste. It did explain the connection between Cassiopeia Vitt and Lev Skolov but I wich he would have just included it at the beginning of the book - I felt the $1.50 I paid Amazon to read this e-book was a bit of a rip-off.
Almost too short a story about Cassiopeia Vitt. This story is supposed to be a prequel to The Emperor's Tomb. Cassiopeia Vitt is one of my favorite characters in the Cotton Malone series. The short segment of The Emperor's Tomb included in this story raises some interesting questions.
Disappointing, I love Steve Berry's novels and this short story was fast paced but even at $.99 I felt ripped off. It was just way to short and an example of publisher's greed. This should have been a free advertisment for the upcoming book.
Short & pointless as a stand alone story. The afterword says it introduces a character & motivation for the next book. Didn't make me want to read it. The writing isn't bad, so I plan to look for the first book of the series.
I thought this was the size of a novella, but it was actually a very short prequel to the next book I'm getting ready to read. In fact, it's included as part of The Emperor's Tomb, so technically, I bought it twice!!!
I am a huge Dan Brown fan and I have been on a hunt for years for an author that gives me the same level of history, puzzles, action, and conspiracy theory. Steve Berry is often recommended to me, but I have yet to read anything of his that has captured me as much as Dan Brown has. I decided to give this short story a try but it unfortunately did not deliver, even as a taste to the next novel in line. The book did peak my interest about the Thracian civilization and I did end up doing a bit of independent research on my own afterwards, but otherwise the short was not very intriguing. I’m going to try some more by Steve Berry to see if I can find anything that meets my Dan Brown standard.
I saw this short story and thought it would be a nice introduction to an author I have heard about, but never read. This was an interesting and exciting short story about a character that was going to be introduced into one of the author's series. I liked the story, the writing and the character and will check out her novella series. Scott Brick is fabulous on narration as always.
Cassiopeia Vitt on a mission for Henrik Thorvaldsen, no Cotton Malone but nice to see how strong and smart she is. Good to see Cassiopeia in action. Interesting twist.
I love Cassiopeia Vitt. She's smart and awesome and kick-butt and completely amazing, but really? I know it's supposed to be a short story, but twenty pages is short even for this. And even though it was only one or two dollars as a Nook book, it was so pointless it wasn't even worth it. When the story opens Cassiopeia has been captured. You get a little bit of why, but not really enough. Then she talks to the captors, tries to escape, gets stuck, gets rescued by a scientist, and walks out, with him saying "we will meet again." There, now you don't even have to read it. That was those twenty pages in three sentences. Needless to say, I was dissapointed.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Short story (31 pages) from Steve Berry. Sets up the connection between Casseopia Vitt and Lee Sokolov which is played out in The Emperor's Tomb. It would be nice to see him develop more of the Casseopia stories. Actually, it'd be nice to have a new one anytime.
Good story, but way too short! Hardly a chapter, much less a short story. But still shows that Miss Vitt could certainly stand on her own as a lead character.
This one was included at the end of The Emperor's Tomb. Since it was referenced in chapter 36, that was when I read it. It is a good backstory of how Cassiopeia and Sokolov met.
Stand-alone short, featuring Cassiopeia Vitt, one of the secondary characters in the Cotton Malone series. After finishing the prior Malone book, the next one up is The Emperor's Tomb. Which happened to collect this first Vitt adventure at the end. Set five years in the past in the Malone timeline, it provides the backstory to Vitt and another character who will probably make an appearance in the Tomb story.
I don't really mind writer's like Berry generating shorter works, as they generally provide insight into the characters that isn't always possible in the longer works as they tend to pull away from the pacing. Beyond it being a shorter work (similar in length and construction to "The Admiral's Mark," which is the earliest Cotton Malone story, before he left the Magellan Billet or dealt with The Bishop's Pawn, which I almost read before the first published Malone novel as it is chronologically the first real full-length adventure), "The Balkan Escape" is an interesting side adventure by an entertaining character.
Cassiopeia is such a better person than Cotton. I wish I'd read this before Cotton Malone #6, The Emperor's Tomb. Cassiopeia's past relationship/encounter with the Russian dude who was kidnapped would have helped that book land a little better for me.
Category Rating Clarity 10: A favorite 9: Maybe 1 issue 8: Minor problems, nothing major wrong 7: Not groundbreaking, has some issues but still really enjoyed 6: Good outweighs the bad 5: Mediocre 4: Bad outweighs the good 3: Not enough here to enjoy 2: Major problems, unredeemable 1: Is there anything good here? 0: The worst