Lianne
D.J. McIntosh crafts an interesting tale in this second novel of the Mesopotamian trilogy, tying in fairy tales, mafia activities, a deadly disease, supernatural elements concerning death, history and the afterlife and, of course, Mesopotamian culture. While a little slow at the beginning, the book is chock-full of interesting historical information and the story really takes off once John Madison travels to the European continent.
I wish I had time to re-read the first novel before jumping into this novel but I don't feel like there was a whole lot of new character development on John Madison's part. The ending of the novel could have also been condensed into one chapter instead of two/three chapters (I can't remember).
Nonetheless, The Book of Stolen Tales is an adventure-and-mystery-packed novel and definitely works as a standalone. I highly recommend this novel for fans of Dan Brown, Steve Berry, James Rollins and all related novelists who write these kinds of history-mystery-adventure novels.
My complete review of the novel was originally posted at caffeinatedlife.net: http://www.caffeinatedlife.net/blog/2013/06/06/review-the-book-of-stolen-tales/