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Loading... The Third Secret: A Novelby Steve Berry
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A cracking good read, a real nailbiter ( )This is the third Steve Berry book I've read and the first one I appreciated and really liked. Credits to the author's thorough research and the way he mixed fact and fiction in one page-turning book. His writing style in this book was really different from the first two I've read (The Romanov Prophecy, Alexandria Link). It had that captivating factor that kept me reading it to the last page. No immature characters, no name-calling, a little sex and a lot of controversy. Religion has always been a sensitive topic to write about and the way this book was written was vivid, excellent, and informative. I also liked the writer's note where he discusses his research and separates fact and fiction. Characters are human, popes are not perfect, the suspense is always there and the danger is ever-present. All of them have redeeming value, clues about events are there and the part I liked best is I wasn't able to predict what happens next. Great read! Anyone who is addicted to religious conspiracies, who enjoyed "The Da Vinci Code" will feel right at home with "The Third Secret" as Steve Berry plunges us right into Vatican politics, secret handshakes, betrayals and the like. Anyone who thought that men of God were holy, pius, good people are obviously very naive. Berry portrays them as backstabbing treacherous rich SOB's with agendas, people who wouldn't hesitate to sell their soul to the Devil if it would advance their cause. The Vatican probably read this book and barfed up a lung. The plot is this. In 1917, the Virgin Mary reveals herself to three children in Portugal. She gives them a message but the Vatican suppresses this message throughout the decades and refuses to release it to the general public. Everytime there is a new Pope, that Pope goes into the Secret Archives, reads the Virgin Mary's 1917 message and instantly orders the message sealed again. What's in the message that shakes the Pope full of fear? "The Third Secret" introduces Pope Clement XV who begins to have doubts about papal infallibility and the Church's restrictive dogma. So he asks his papal secretary Father Colin Michener to go to Romania and locate the priest who translated the Virgin Mary's Portugese messages into Italian in the 1950's. He also asks for help in getting the Virgin's message out to people. When that priest turns up brutally murdered afterwards, events start to quickly spiral violently out of control. A reactionary cardinal, who is also the Vatican secretary of state and Clement's most bitter enemy, is determined to expose what Clement is trying to do, while at the same time eventually become Pope himself. He doesn't want the Virgin's message to be made public and will do whatever it takes to destroy the message. Even if it means dispatching a killer of his own. I like Berry's books...but then again I got approx. 400 pages into this before I realized I had already read it. I still finished it. Make of that what you will... Mystery set in the Vatican. Interesting until the end, the author gets on his soap box at the conclusion. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 034547614X, Mass Market Paperback)For Steve Berry, it's a fortuitous coincidence that his third novel, a Vatican-centered conspiracy thriller titled The Third Secret, was published in the immediate aftermath of Pope Benedict XVI's anointment in Rome. While this exuberantly contrived yarn would likely have drawn an audience at any time, it benefits from coming before readers just after they've been primed with news reports about papal succession, the relative influence and legacy of pontiffs, and the increasing tug-of-war between Roman Catholic progressives and conservative traditionalists.Set in the near future, Secret introduces Jakob Volkner--Pope Clement XV--a German "caretaker pope" who, nearing the age of 80, was elected as John Paul II's successor. But three years into his papacy, the thoughtful Clement has begun to quietly express skepticism about papal infallibility and the Church's restrictive dogma, and to make odd requests of his longtime secretary, Monsignor Colin Michener, an Irish-born but American-reared priest whose vows of celibacy have been tested--and found wanting. Clement has also made repeated visits to a guarded sanctum within the Vatican archives, where sacred and historic documents are stored. And he's dispatched Michener to Romania to locate an elderly cleric who, in the 1950s, translated three cryptic prophecies, purportedly offered by the Virgin Mary in 1917 to a trio of children in Fatima, Portugal. Those secrets have since been fully disclosed to the world. Or have they? That’s the question facing Michener in the wake of Clement's shocking suicide, as he pursues a twisted trail of clues, crimes, and religious forecasts from Rome to Bosnia to Germany, accompanied by his former lover, journalist Katerina Lew. But making any additional secrets known to the world will put Michener in confrontation with doctrinal reactionaries, led by Cardinal Alberto Valendrea, the Vatican's Italian secretary of state, who's determined to follow Clement as the Vicar of Christ--even if that requires inventing a few new sins and flouting a 900-year-old prediction of doom for the next pope. Attorney-author Berry, praised previously for The Amber Room and The Romanov Prophecy, enriches The Third Secret with glimpses behind the locked doors of a papal selection process and knowledge of centuries-old Catholic prognostications that, while employed judiciously in these pages, nonetheless suggest a prodigious amount of research. He's less successful with his casting. Valendrea is a wincingly unnuanced scoundrel, and Ms. Lew achieves scarce definition beyond being a raven-tressed temptress to powerful prelates. Thankfully, Berry does better by Michener, who finds himself at a crossroads, carrying on in Clement's name even as he searches for confirmation that his own life of devotion and service has been meaningful. Although the secrets "revealed" in this tale seem more controversial than plausible, and a potentially intriguing subplot about the excommunication of a maverick priest ends up as a throwaway device, The Third Secret builds to a conclusion that is as suspenseful and stunning as it is inevitable. Have faith. --J. Kingston Pierce (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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