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Jason Elam

Author of Monday Night Jihad

7 Works 422 Members 67 Reviews 2 Favorited

Series

Works by Jason Elam

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Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Elam, Jason
Birthdate
1970-03-08
Gender
male
Education
University of Hawaii (BA, Communications, 1992)
Liberty Theological Seminary
Occupations
American Football placekicker
Organizations
NFL
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

68 reviews
Riley Covington is a football player who leads a second life as a member of a Countererrorism Division. The football season is interrupted by a massive amount of terrorist attacks and our guy Riley and his team are tapped to find and stop the leader, who in turn is targeting Riley and his team.
I don't normally read Christian fiction football terrorist thrillers, and now I know why. If you like books with lots of blood and gore and books with more guns than people, this book may be for you. show more The book is the second in a series and I missed the first one, so I had to do some scrambling to fill in some of the relationships. I did enjoy the thin line of humor running through the book. I know people who would like the book a lot more than I did. show less
½
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Review of Inside Threat: Blackout in no way prepared me for this. Do you ever read a book and go "What happened?" Well, Inside Threat did that for me.
(Some spoilers though I tried not to give away too many read with caution. ;) ) I am going to attempt to give this book the review it deserves but I fear it may end up to be hard for me to do, since (spoiler) I cried over it, CRIED. I rarely cry over books but WOW, I did not see this ending like it did, how could it, honestly? I have read many, show more many, maybe too many suspense, but this one? It shocked me. I thought the ending might happen though I didn't expect it since so few authors do what these two authors did. I respect them for the ending since it ended the series with a strong, fulling believing, rock solid faith in God, His love, His control, I just have to say this book is violent, it is hard, sad, painful, wonderful, and most of all filled with faith much like the first in the series, ending as it did is sad, it's truthful. There was a reason to end like it did, and I may disagree with the ending and that's my thought but the out come of the ending was perfect, there’s nothing better than this book's ending.
Yes, I cried some tears, and many readers I'm sure would sob at this book but I feel it is worth it. This book shows ultimate faith in God, and I just love it, suggest you read it, and ask you to consider the message inside.
No, Riley is not a real man but men can learn from this character.
My one complaint is that there was no closure for Scott, Skeeter, and Keith was in it so little.
And that's all I have to say one Inside Threat, the book that has broken my heart in a good and bad way.
P.S. Gatorade is AWESOME.
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Review of Monday Night Jihad: I came across this book on Goodreads and saw an author I follow had read it, rated it 5 stars, and what not so I thought I'd give it a shot even though I know nothing about football and expected it to be a somewhat enjoyable but not great book. I was wrong. So wrong. If there is one word to describe what I found in this book it is genuine faith, real, living it out faith, strong faith, broken faith, but all the same faith.
Riley, oh, Riley, one of the characters show more I had no idea what to expect from, I thought maybe his faith would be lukewarm like the faith of other characters but no, he truly 'lived' out his beliefs in the pages of Monday Night Jihad. This suspense has a mix of humor, danger, friendship, and so much more. While there was too much violence for my taste it was okay, I suppose. Now for Scott, he's a crazy guy, in a good way, but being him, well, that's not a place anyone would want to be sometimes, Jim Hicks was another character that I liked though with him I had a love/hate feel.
With all of the characters, the settings, and the plot this story pulls together into a thoroughly enjoyable yet edge of your seat novel perfect for all suspense lovers. I do dislike seeing the bad guys POV but that's just me.

Review of Blown Coverage: Reading this whole series in a matter of days this book blends somewhat with book one and three, oops, which is causing a problem in the review department since it's hard to review a book that has blended in with other books. So, big oops!
Anyway, it's a good book and it starts out a little crazy, there are terrorists, lots of shootings, shooting, and fights, of course, plus some characters die, and there's a countdown on more dangerous attacks, blah blah blah, review complete. For readers over 17/19 or so for violence. (Hopes this would get a Scott Ross stamp of approval if he were a real person.)

Review of Blackout: This had such a sad feel in it, so dark, so much pain, and death. *sighs* With the bombings and a city going dark this novel shows so much truth of how people act, treat others, and how they live. This thriller is has such a wide range of subjects covered, I did feel parts were unrealistic like Riley's part in finding the EMPs but I may be wrong, I loved reading about the team, their goofiness, the crazy ideas they have, and everything about them, seeing Scott step into the leadership position he had was neat, I loved seeing his character development.

Honestly I loved this but it was so dark/violent/and sad.

Review of Inside Threat: Blackout in no way prepared me for this. Do you ever read a book and go "What happened?" Well, Inside Threat did that for me.
(Some spoilers though I tried not to give away too many read with caution. ;) ) I am going to attempt to give this book the review it deserves but I fear it may end up to be hard for me to do, since (spoiler) I cried over it, CRIED. I rarely cry over books but WOW, I did not see this ending like it did, how could it, honestly? I have read many, many, maybe too many suspense, but this one? It shocked me. I thought the ending might happen though I didn't expect it since so few authors do what these two authors did. I respect them for the ending since it ended the series with a strong, fulling believing, rock solid faith in God, His love, His control, I just have to say this book is violent, it is hard, sad, painful, wonderful, and most of all filled with faith much like the first in the series, ending as it did is sad, it's truthful. There was a reason to end like it did, and I may disagree with the ending and that's my thought but the out come of the ending was perfect, there’s nothing better than this book's ending.
Yes, I cried some tears, and many readers I'm sure would sob at this book but I feel it is worth it. This book shows ultimate faith in God, and I just love it, suggest you read it, and ask you to consider the message inside.
No, Riley is not a real man but men can learn from this character.
My one complaint is that there was no closure for Scott, Skeeter, and Keith was in it so little.
And that's all I have to say one Inside Threat, the book that has broken my heart in a good and bad way.
P.S. Gatorade is AWESOME.
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Tyndale Publishing sent me this book free for an honest review.

The first thing you might like to know is that this is not the first 'Riley Covington Thriller' that Jason Elam and Steve Yohn have written - in fact it is the fourth. I had never heard of Riley Covington before I started the book and didn't know this. That's OK. 'Inside Threat' reads just fine as a stand alone book. Having said that, I may just have to find some of the others. (oops - just gave away my stand on this book. My show more bad.) Here's what it's all about.

So - pulp fiction. Really good, fun, suspenseful, Christian, pulp fiction. Now, I know some of you have an aversion to the terms good/fun/Christian showing up in the same sentence but hear me out:

Good!
I was a little worried when I found out one of the authors used to be a football player (that's American/Canadian football for those of you who equate the word with soccer) (oh - Jason Elam) I'm not what you would call a big football fan (understatement of the year!) (sorry Jason) Add to that, one of the characters in the book, Riley Covington himself, is also a football player and you have the makings of my own, personal nuclear bomb. The bomb was a dud - the book wasn't. Well written, great flow, lots of 'had me chuckling' humour, NOT lots of football. (thanks for that!) I completely fell in love with the characters. They felt real and were very accessible.

Fun!
The banter between the characters was fast, smart and funny! The characters didn't take themselves too seriously, were able to laugh together and had me laughing with them. I especially loved the penalty jars in the analysts' office. The swear jar was labelled 'You kiss your Mama with that Mouth' and the penalty jar for using tired out cliches was 'Oh No You Di'int'. OK, maybe you had to be there but those jars got a real workout and it was funny!

Suspenseful!
Terrorist attacks happening all over the USA. Trying to figure out what is going on and how it all fit together was a stretch. I didn't get it until the authors were ready to let me get it - which I love. It is always such a bummer when I get it before the characters in the book do. And the hostage taking was truly frightening.

Christian!
I have to admit, I get seriously tired of the preachy aspects of a lot of Christian lit - and there was definitely some of that. I did like the comparisons between Christian, devoted Muslim and extreme 'Muslim'. In fact, if there was one area of the book that could have been better developed, it was the exploration of devout Muslim beliefs.

The Best Part of the Book ...
is the part I really can't tell you much about without dropping a honking big spoiler (mean, I know. Sorry.) Suffice it to say, the authors weren't afraid to take the story where it needed to go.

The Worst Part of the Book ...
was the effort that went into trying to convert devout Muslim characters to Christianity. I realize this is a big part of Christian literature but it seemed rather arrogant to me. Luckily this was a very small part of the book.

Overall
Probably the best Christian literature I've read in a long while.
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Statistics

Works
7
Members
422
Popularity
#57,803
Rating
3.1
Reviews
67
ISBNs
19
Favorited
2

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