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Carregando... The Lazarus Prophecyde F. G. Cottam
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Registre-se no LibraryThing tpara descobrir se gostará deste livro. Ainda não há conversas na Discussão sobre este livro. This is my second book by F.G. Cottam and was a definite hit with me. Unlike the first one I read (The Colony) there was no slow burn opening that I had to slog through, it threw me straight into the action and never took its foot off the pedal, so to speak. All of the characters were well written and powerful, and the world and atmosphere sufficiently familiar and creepy to make everything that bit more intense. I was on the edge of my seat for so much of this book. Definitely a book I will recommend. This is my second book by F.G. Cottam and was a definite hit with me. Unlike the first one I read (The Colony) there was no slow burn opening that I had to slog through, it threw me straight into the action and never took its foot off the pedal, so to speak. All of the characters were well written and powerful, and the world and atmosphere sufficiently familiar and creepy to make everything that bit more intense. I was on the edge of my seat for so much of this book. Definitely a book I will recommend. A spate of gruesome murders have hit London. Woman are being killed in a violent and vicious way which harks back to the work of 'Jack the Ripper' but this killers is not seen on camera, he can get through locked doors. At each scene he leaves a note in archaic languages, written in the blood of his victim. After starting with unknown prostitutes he then moves onto respected women - an actress, a doctor, a politician - and the pressure on DI Jane Sullivan to catch him increases. I could stop there and this would be a standard police procedural but it is not at all, the book slips into a sub-Dan Brown link between a sect of monks and a prophecy about the Anti-Christ and the End of Days. Of course it's really silly, but that doesn't stop it being a really entertaining books. Suspend disbelief and go along for the ride! sem resenhas | adicionar uma resenha
There is a killer loose on the streets of London, one that evades security cameras, is not held by locks, and savagely mutilates his victims. When the murderer switches from unknown prostitutes to Julie Longmuir, a beautiful actress at the height of her success, no woman feels safe. As the press begin to draw uncomfortable comparisons with Jack the Ripper, Jane Sullivan, heading up the police investigation, grudgingly has to agree. But the religious writing, scrawled on the wall in Julie Longmuir's blood, is outside Jane's area of expertise. Roping in Jacob Prior, a disillusioned theologian, they attempt to pick apart the demonic delusions of this Ripper copycat. They must act quickly, as events are spiralling out of control, and Jane is next on the killer's list. Jane will be tested beyond the limits of standard police work, as the esoteric insinuates itself into the investigation. For events are linked to the clandestine Priory in the Pyrenees, the home of a secret Christian sect that pre-dates the Knights Templar. Jane and Jacob are faced with a deeper mystery than they had ever dreamed of; are they simply dealing with a psychopath, or is this something bigger, is this The End of Days? Não foram encontradas descrições de bibliotecas. |
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Google Books — Carregando... GênerosClassificação decimal de Dewey (CDD)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-Classificação da Biblioteca do Congresso dos E.U.A. (LCC)AvaliaçãoMédia:
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The Lazarus Prophecy is the first book that I have read by F.G. Cottam although he is popular among my book friends. Now I can certainly see why.
It is an accurate description to call this a supernatural crime story but it is much more than that. The Lazarus Prophecy really elevates the form, like The Club Dumas did years ago. And it does it with fine writing, great characters, a horrifying villain, and a very intricate, layered plot that reaches back to the time of Christ. He also does it with tremendous description and sense of place. I had a strong sense of London (both present and 1880’s) and that mountain keep that houses the monks of the Order of , who we have never heard of but who nonetheless have literally saved the world many times over.
Cottam begins by flipping back and forth between two story lines. The first is a really well done police procedural with the difference being that the killer is supernatural, although they don’t know that yet. The second story line deals with a secret order of monks living in a mountain keep. Ordained by St. Peter himself, they remain secret because if the general population knew of their existence and more importantly WHY they exist it would be too much. Sort of a “You can’t handle the truth” situation if ever there was one. They are accurately described as "God's gaolers." At this point in the novel I was impressed by how well Cottam handled both aspects—the crime story and the supernatural one. I think it is quite rare to be this versatile. John Connolly does it. So does Cottam.
The plotting was especially well done. Slowly building tension to a climax and then, right near the end of the book (judging by the amount of chapters left) we suddenly are dropped down a rabbit hole into 1888 London. Distracting? Jarring? Not at all. It was my favorite part of the book. So go ahead and add a strong and equally well done historical aspect to the description of this novel. I went from really liking this book to loving it. And when we returned to present for what could be called “round 2’” Cottam has set up a no holds barred white knuckle ride to the finale.
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