The Pyramid Code by Richard Bradley
From the very first page, The Pyramid Code throws you headfirst into a pulse-pounding archaeological thriller that never lets up. Richard Bradley’s debut novel is a riveting blend of history, espionage, and ancient mystery that will appeal to fans of Dan Brown, Clive Cussler, or Steve Berry, but with a grit and modern urgency that’s all its own.
Marc O’Hara, the no-nonsense ex-soldier turned intelligence reader, gets pulled back into the field with a mission unlike anything he’s encountered before: solve a cryptic 13th-century alchemical puzzle or watch a terrorist group known as the Red Death unleash a flesh-eating toxin. It’s the kind of setup that had me hooked instantly. What begins as a cerebral hunt through history quickly spirals into a globe-trotting race against time, with the fate of the world hanging in the balance.
I loved how Bradley weaves real historical elements with thrilling fiction. The locations, Parisian libraries, dusty tombs in Egypt, and ancient Syrian ruins, are brought to life with rich detail. And then there are the eerie discoveries: lost texts, medieval automatons, decaying corpses that may not be quite as lifeless as they appear. These creepy, atmospheric moments gave me major Indiana Jones-meets-X-Files vibes in the best way possible.
O’Hara and Kim Shahrokh make for a compelling team. There’s great chemistry and tension between them, and I appreciated that Kim is more than just a sidekick, she’s sharp, fearless, and pivotal to the unraveling of the mystery. As the clues deepen, so do the questions about trust, loyalty, and whether history itself has been one big lie. The stakes rise quickly, and just when you think you’ve figured it out, Bradley pulls the rug out from under you with a twist that’s genuinely shocking.
Verdict: The Pyramid Code is a cinematic, brainy, and action-packed thrill ride that hits all the right notes. Richard Bradley has arrived with a bang, and if this is just the beginning, I can’t wait to see where he takes us next.
5/5 stars — A must-read for thriller junkies and history lovers alike.