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The Righteous Men (2006)

The Righteous Men (2006)

Book Info

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Genre
Rating
3.61 of 5 Votes: 5
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ISBN
0007203306 (ISBN13: 9780007203307)
Language
English
Publisher
harpertorch

About book The Righteous Men (2006)

‘The Righteous Men’ was the first book from Sam Bourne that I have read and I have mixed feelings about the book. I bought ‘The Righteous Men’, ‘The Last Testament’ and ‘The Final Reckoning’ – all from the same author - together in 2008 while on a trip and read all three of them back-to-back as I had no other titles with me at the time. All these books are thrillers with political & religious angles and have a fair dose of ancient manuscripts, mysterious artifacts, historical enigma, secret societies and ancient brotherhoods sprinkled within them. The amount of research that has gone into each title is impressive; but when compared to some of the very best writers in the thriller business, Sam Bourne fails to connect much with the reader or captivate. In ‘The Righteous Men’ the plot revolves around the hero Will Monroe – a reporter for New York Times – who is probing about some unexplained killings spread across the globe soon gets threatened by followers of a menacing ancient cult and gets embroiled in a conspiracy of great magnitude with it’s mysteries buried deep into Jewish theology. The part where the author describes the history & practices of Hasidic Jewish community shows that the author has placed some effort into his research, but as a thriller the writer should have put in more efforts. My experiences with both ‘The Last Testament’ and ‘The Final Reckoning’ were also in the similar lines with the later being a bit more thrilling and captivating than his first two books.I have copies of the later novels from the author, ‘The Chosen One’ and ‘Pantheon’ shelved unopened in my library, but haven’t yet decided on whether to read them or not. I am not saying that his books are total duds, as his novels have all the ingredients necessary for a political/ religious/ historical thriller but his weak characterization and rather long winding narration doesn’t captivate the reader like a master thriller. The writing is not fluid and has its moments of failure and most of the characters including the lead protagonist are hollow and irritating at times.If you are looking for a passive read with a fair amount of action, mystery, adventure and glimpses of thrills, then you can go for Sam Bourne novels but as a true thriller you may find it a bit disappointing.

If you don’t wanna have the plot spoiled for you, don’t read on. The main character of the book is a rookie New York Times journalist whose wife gets kidnapped. The trail leads him first and foremost into Crown Hights, Hassidic Jewish turf. It is indeed they who are holding the hapless woman.Meanwhile a number of people are being killed worldwide. They are the so-called 26 righteous men; saintly men that perform deeds of unprecedented goodness in all anonymity that according to Jewish tradition uphold the world against the commonness, the sins of all other human beings.The people that are killing them turn out to be supersessionist messianic Christians that wish to usher in the end of the world; the moment where Jesus comes charging back to cast his final judgment on each and everyone. Funny enough, last Thursday I sat talking to friend about the crazy messianics that are known for their so-called pro-Israel stance, for the fact that they spare no resources to get Jews to go to Israel. In support of the state of Israel, they espouse views that would make the most avid of Likudniks blush. Indeed, anything that reeks of compromise with loathsome Arabs is condemned with unprecedented zeal.They seem to believe that Jesus will in fact come back once all the Jews are reassembled in the Holy land. But ay, here’s the rub; On this sacred day, the Jews will have to accept the true calling of God or face immediate destruction.Indeed, every advise they have for Israel, every policy that they subscribe to is a recipe to bring about ill times, not in some far away realm of time, but right here, right now in this day ‘n age. It is to be expected that in their modern day prophecising they look to Iran as the bringer of God’s wrath.

Do You like book The Righteous Men (2006)?

THE RIGHTEOUS MEN (Suspense-NYC-Cont) – PoorBourne, Sam – 1st bookHarperCollinsPublisher, 2006- UK HardcoverBritish born Will Monroe is a fledgling reporter with the New York Times. Murders are occurring around the world. The victims seem to be random until it is realized that each person performs deeds which define him as a righteous man. Will’s wife, Beth, is kidnapped and told not to call the police, they do not want money and that she will be released unharmed in a few days. Will’s search takes him to his father, two old friends, and into the Hassidic community of New York City. *** The legend behind this story is, apparently, real and I really wanted to like this book. The best thing I can say about this book is that it did keep me turning the pages, but I’m not certain why. Will was neither a particularly interesting or bright character. The strongest character in the book was his former girlfriend, TC. One major point in the book which prevented Will from being immediately murdered was painfully wrong; obviously the author did not know about medical procedures common for U.S. male babies as recent as the 1980s. Toward the end, I was really hoping the story was not taking the very predictable path it was; but it did. So I read it, I finished it, but don’t know that I’ll read another Mr. Bourne who is, in fact, England’s Guardian's political correspondent Jonathan Freedland. I’d have used a pseudonym, too, had I written this.
—LJ

Ever since the stunning commercial success of Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code, writer after writer has tried to pull Brown’s sword of success from the stone of mediocrity. In order to convince themselves their efforts are working, their book jackets are decorated with quotes comparing them favourably to Mr. Brown and claiming ascendency to his throne. No matter how these upstarts toil, they will never receive the same acclaim or cash as Dan Brown for one simple reason: he was a trailblazer and they are camp followers. In a world full of books on Templars, kabbalah and everything in between, no work of mere fiction can hope to rival the success of The Da Vinci Code. Only a work of literature could do that.Sam Bourne’s The Righteous Men is, alas, not a work of literature. It is a tightly woven piece of fiction with all the elements common to mystic mysteries: kabbalah, Christians, Crown Heights Hassidism and murder. The hero is reporter struggling to free his wife kidnappers with the help of his best friend and college sweetheart. Bourne’s pure mystery writing is gripping and keeps the reader guessing. Once the mystical elements are added he flounders. He fails to create a sense of awe. The reader can’t believe in the otherworldly elements of the book – in this case that the deaths of thirty-six men will end the world – because the protagonist himself never comes around to believing it. The Da Vinci Code created doubt and wonder simultaneously. For this reason the story stays with the reader long after the book is closed. The Righteous Men can’t even do that for the protagonist of its own book and is therefore confined to the shelves of mediocrity.
—Erica Mukherjee

Its amazing what you will do when waiting for trains that are delayed - (Had to travel for work and after numerous and annoying train delays I ended up picking up something to read)Well I have seen enough of Sam Bourne books about to recognise the title and author and thought why not. I must admit its a well written book with a fair share of grisley crime and mystery and suspense - its tricky to comment about a book that really is building towards a huge big reveal - (and forgive the comparisons but like Dan Brown books once you know what the punchline is - you never need to read it again) - but I will try. The book really has two stories in it - the one the character is trying to uncover and the other is a story the author wants to reveal to us. Now again without giving anything away what the author is posing - is an idea linked to Jewish Folklore, while the character is trying to understand these supposedly unconnected murders. The result is an interesting read and certainly one that helped pass the time and make me forget how cold train stations really are. I would not list this as one of my all time favourites but I certainly did enjoy it.
—Andrew

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