Pages: 576 (Paperback) ISBN: 0007266499 Pub: Harper Pub date: 2008-08-04 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 171
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Reader Reviews:Ok, not gripping (0/0 people found this helpful)It takes me a while to get involved in books but this one I stuck with. Although the idea behind it was good there is no real story, and eventually the writer goes off at a tangent and is not talking about the present story line, but another one set 50 years in the past.
A rather plodding 'thriller'. (0/0 people found this helpful)This was my first reading of 'Sam Bourne' and I don't think I will read another one. It was good enough to carry on reading till the end of course, but I found that the mixing of real second world war history within a 'thriller' plot was really artificial and the inserpt of flashbacks here and there felt easy to get the book going. The relationship between Tom the lawyer and Rebecca is simply to silly for words, crashing straight into obvious devices. Their common search of the 'truth' feels artificial again with awkward moves and the resolution I found utterly unconvincing, especially when you learn a certain something about Rebecca. Why take us on this long lasting inquest when you learn that rather crucial bit at the end ?
Entertaining and historically interesting (1/1 people found this helpful)The Daily Mirror is quoted on the cover as saying that this is "The biggest challenge to Dan Brown's crown" and unlike another review (taken from the Jewish Chronicle) I see this as a compliment for the simple reason that both writers make you interested in finding out more when you've finished the book. Whether it be more about art and paintings, religion, or in the case of 'The Final Reckoning', the photographs of George Kadish.
Sam Bourne back on track (1/1 people found this helpful)I loved the book the Righteous men and after finishing it went and bought the Last Testament. Although I loved the first book, the second did nothing for me. This book had blown me away. I just cant put it down.
Stunning thriller (4/4 people found this helpful)Jonathan Freedland, in his alternative persona of thriller-writer Sam Bourne, should wince when the Daily Mirror seeks to shower praise on him by calling him "the biggest challenger to Dan Brown's crown". It is a barbed compliment. Freedland, after all, can write, while the jury is still out as to whether Dan Brown has yet to acquire such a skill.
Similar ProductsThe Last Testament The Alexander Cipher The Mozart Conspiracy The Alchemist's Secret The Righteous Men CategoriesAmazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:
Books -> Subjects -> Fiction -> General
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