Friday 14 December 2012

BOOK OF THE DAY: The Shekinah Legacy (A Charlotte Ansari Thriller) by Gary Lindberg

by Gary Lindberg




BOOK DESCRIPTION
In this controversial Amazon best-selling thriller, international cable TV journalist Charlotte Ansari and her Asperger's son are caught literally in the crossfire of history when terrorists, the CIA, Mossad and the Vatican all converge in a pulse-pounding search for relics that could forever change the balance of power in the world.

Three decades ago, Charlotte's mother suddenly vanished with no trace. The mystery was never solved. Then suddenly, on the same day that Charlotte's home is attacked by terrorists, her son receives an email from the grandmother that he has never known. The coded message catapults Charlotte and her son on a dangerous mission to India and Kashmir to find the only objects that can save the old woman's life. Unfortunately, Charlotte and her autistic son don't know what they are looking for.

The Shekinah Legacy is a thriller in the tradition of Dan Brown, Steve Berry and James Rollins. In this provocative novel, author Gary Lindberg uses the form of the thriller to explore the limits and perils of belief.


AUTHOR BIO
Gary Lindberg traveled around the world to research this story. As a writer and film producer/director, he has won over one hundred major national and international awards. He is the co-writer and producer of the Paramount Pictures feature film That Was Then, This Is Now starring Emilio Estevez and Morgan Freeman. This is his first published novel. He lives in Minnesota with his wife, Gloria, and his Jack Russell terrier Fletcher.


REVIEWS
5.0 out of 5 stars Dan Brown's got nothing on Gary Lindberg January 3, 2012
Format:Paperback
I like finding books I can't put down, and The Shekinah Legacy definitely kept me wanting to read more. The story is cut from the cloth of The Da Vinci Code, but Dan Brown has nothing on Gary Lindberg except perhaps a better editor; there are a few places that are a bit rough. I've never met a famous journalist, an Asperger's sufferer, or an assassin, so who am I to say, but the characters seemed believable to me. They were well-painted, and then they changed along the way, all in tune with the events happening to them and around them.

There are no doubt many interesting historical facts embedded in the novel, which I'm sure will be of interest to other readers. For me, the only important thing is that the background is reasonably credible and doesn't entirely contravene history as I know it. This book easily meets and exceeds that criterion.

There is a lot of death and gore, but there are many "sides" in this complex thriller and most of them consider the treasure hunt at the heart of this story a matter of life and death, so it makes sense that there is as much of one as the other in the story.

I admit that I dreaded getting to the end of The Shekinah Legacy, because I couldn't foresee a good way to get out of the messy religious Gordian's knot without something unsatisfying, unbelievable, or beyond my capacity to swallow. But I loved the way that part of the story was wrapped up and congratulate the author on the ending's sensitivity and beauty.
The writing is strong, the characters are deep and engaging, the story is gripping, and the pace is driving. It's well worth a read.


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