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Angel Light [Mass Market Paperback]

Andrew M. Greeley (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 28, 2006
"I do not want ten million dollars. I do not want to visit Ireland. I do not want to end a Tobin family feud. And, above all, I do not want to court my eighth cousin, once removed." Even as he says the words, "Toby" Tobin, Irish-American computer hacker, knows it's useless to resist. His late great-uncle's will must be obeyed, and his family is determined to make him respectable by his twenty-fifth birthday.
 
Encouraged by a photo of his cousin, Sara Anne Elizabeth Tobin, with her gorgeous black hair, blue eyes, and pale skin, Toby checks his computer for travel arrangements to Ireland. He finds himself chatting with an unusual travel agent, Raphaella, a very modern angel, who's been surfing the net for someone to look after.
 
Raphaella gives him a new passport and first-class plane tickets out of O'Hare, and the encouragement and good humor he'll need on his quest for a living grail--the beautiful, mysterious, troubled, young Sara Tobin. He must marry Sara within the month (and solve an ancient mystery and elude a threatening thug) in order to claim his inheritance.
 
Angel Light is based on the Book of Tobis in the Old Testament, one of the sweetest love stories ever told.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"Toby" Tobin, Irish-American computer hacker, is in a bind: he must court and marry his pretty Irish cousin in order to claim a $10 million bequest. Easy, right? But he's not counting on having to solve an old mystery, dodge hostile attackers, and put up with angels bossing him around too. Greeley has a light touch with romantic suspense, and it works. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

In an engaging if opportunistic plundering of publishing trends, Greeley unites angels and the Internet in a saccharine tale based on the Old Testament's Book of Tobias. Narrator Toby Tobin, a young Chicagoan, is a computer hacker who stands to inherit $10 million from his late great-uncle if he can travel to the Emerald Isle and marry his gorgeous cousin Sara Anne without revealing to her the conditions of the will. Toby proves a reluctant romancer until he's contacted in cyberspace by his guardian angel, a seraph named Raphael who persuades him to make the journey. Following angelic advice, Toby overcomes his distant cousin's cold shoulder, and romance blossoms when he and Sara Anne begin to discover each other's gifts. But Toby must also help his beloved get past the aftermath of a bad relationship with a violent thug who continues to threaten her safety. Greeley compensates for a thin story by heaping on the blarney (as he did in last year's Irish Gold) and a raft of travelogue-like material about the charms of Ireland. The author's penchant for cuteness grates at times, but this good-humored and ultimately fetching story, like the feisty angel it features, should have wings nonetheless.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Mass Market Paperback: 448 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books (November 28, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765355973
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765355973
  • Product Dimensions: 7.8 x 4.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #614,522 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

A native of Chicago, Father Andrew M. Greeley, is a priest, distinguished sociologist and bestselling author. He is professor of social sciences at the University of Chicago and the University of Arizona, as well as Research Associate at the National Opinion Research Center at the University of Chicago. His current sociological research focuses on current issues facing the Catholic Church-including celibacy of priests, ordination of women, religious imagination, and sexual behavior of Catholics.Father Greeley received the S.T.L. in 1954 from St. Mary of Lake Seminary. His graduate work was done at the University of Chicago, where he received the M.A. Degree in 1961 and the Ph.D. in 1962.Father Greeley has written scores of books and hundreds of popular and scholarly articles on a variety of issues in sociology, education and religion. His column on political, church and social issues is carried by the Chicago Sun Times and many other newspapers. He stimulates discussion of neglected issues and often anticipates sociological trends. He is the author of more than thirty bestselling novels and an autobiography, Furthermore!: Confessions of a Parish Priest.

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Who says romance is dead? Not Father Greeley!, October 28, 1999
By A Customer
Okay, let's go through the Greeley Checklist; Irish Catholic family, Check. Strong female lead, check. Sweet romance with a touch of danger, check. Happy ending, check. Yep, looks like the old Greeley formula. But as usual, he pulls it off in fine style. Patrick and Sara Anne are as engaging as my favorite Greeley couple, Dermot and Nuala from IRISH GOLD. And Raphaella, the angel with an attitude, is a delightful companion. One cavaet; The thug who terrorizes our heroes. I think I saw this same guy in IRISH LACE. Greeley needs to come up with some new villians. All in all, formulatic but expertly handled. Andrew M. Greeley never fails to entertain with his warmth, wisdom and knowledge of the human heart. First-rate fun!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Trip to the Old Sod, With Angels, January 6, 2005
By 
avoraciousreader (Somewhere in the Space Time Continuum) - See all my reviews
Ay and begorra, isn't it a book written in stereotype Irish dialect, now? And isn't near every declaration a question? and every use of "at all" doubled up, "at all, at all"? And can't you hear the lilt and the brogue, relentlessly? If it were not a Christian book, would you not expect a leprechaun to pop up here and there, instead of an angel?

Isn't our wee lad of a hero thrust into a quest for the fair maid, through the will of an unknown uncle? If he can woo and wed her within the month, will he not win an inheritance of ten million dollars (though must he never tell her so?)?

And isn't it the early 90's, and the internet just getting its start, and our hero Paddy (much to the dismay of his proper, lace-curtain family) a computer whiz, consulting instead of getting a "real" job, and working on an early (and magically effective) version of a search engine? Much as he initially hates the idea of jetting off to Eire to deliver an envelope to an estranged (and hitherto unkown) branch of the family, reconcile the two branches, and seek the hand of his eighth cousin, once removed, Sara Anne, doesn't he log on to his search engine and begin instant messaging with a mysterious travel agent, Rafe?

And doesn't Rafe encourage his trip, provide him with first class accomodations throughout, bureaucracy free arrangements, and wads of cash? And isn't it all free?

And don't Dei spring out of Machinae about every third page, except it's actually one Deus and not really a Deus but a mere angel, or more precisely a Seraph? And doesn't this take away from the plot and the character development, and the moral quandries those of us not so blessed experience, to know that at every turn Paddy has a very active guardian angel watching over him, to guide his suddenly-glib tongue and protect him from the forces of Evil? And doesn't it get a mite boring by about halfway through the book, to know the magic pop-goes-the-deus will show up to fix it all, or at least offer reassurances?

And doesn't it make things a wee tad less interesting that the fair maid Sara Anne falls immediately and hopelessly in love with our questing hero (after one very brief snark)? And that it takes so little effort for him to cure her moods (seemingly any little bit of flesh pawing, or a few minutes time)? Doesn't he cure her of the deep underlying trauma, or at least set her on the path, though one simple conversation? And don't her parents even want him for a son-in-law from the git-go?

And isn't every woman, or at least those on our side, a knock-out beauty, with gleefully described breasts and thighs, buttocks and torsos, intelligence and wit and a randy nature? And doesn't it get a bit tiresome about the thirty seventh time we are treated to a slightly varied description of extravagantly molded and displayed feminine flesh and our hero's questing hands and libido? And doesn't even the angel, who is better called Rae than Rafe, have the hottest of bods when she appears?

And isn't himself a Catholic priest? And for all of that, with his vows of chastity and poverty, doesn't the author tread a fine line between chaste appreciation of womanly quality and lascivious near occasion of sin? doesn't he slobber a bit too much over the wondrous Sara Anne and her ma, and the angel Rae, in all their abundant smoothness? And doesn't he seem awful familiar and comfortable with the life of the rich, and little concerned with the life of the poor, or even middle class, except perhaps in theory?

And yet despite it all, doesn't Father Greely write with wit and grace, sufficient to carry this reader through a good part of the book before it became repetitious and tiresome, enough to earn it three stars? and isn't it maybe enough for some throughout, for those who believe life happens to them through mysterious devine intervention and control, rather than that they live it themselves?

And despite it all, are not some of the characters rather engaging? isn't the seraph Rae a delightful concept? and wouldn't Sara Anne be quite a catch even with an accomplishment or two less, a less queenly wardrobe and country-club life, maybe even a nose out of place or an ounce or two extra? (And why do the characters have to be so uniquely perfect? and where does that leave the other 99.999% of us, in Father Greeley's eyes? are not mere mortals worthy of divine grace?)

But if you want a more satisfying bit of a quest for a fair maid, with truer difficulties and progression through stages of the relationship, and a good bit of travelogue to boot, would ye not be better off reading "OVER THE MOAT: love among the ruins of imperial vietnam" by James Sullivan? Ye would. Isn't it a true story of a young man (Irish-American, to boot), without angelic assistance, who spends a year in Hue wooing and winning his love and winning over the forces of evil (bureaucracy and vengeful suitors) through his own efforts?

(And shouldn't I be mentioning, in all fairness, that I came to this book by accident as one involving a computer hacker, in the real sense of the word, and not through some fascination with angelology or dime store theology or hackneyed romance?)
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Father Greeley's view of angels is fascinating!, August 21, 1998
By A Customer
However, I have the feeling, after reading this book, that Andrew Greeley may be suffering from his vow of celibacy. The descriptions of all the women with their "wondrous" breasts is getting really old. He needs to learn another word because this reader is sick of that one. The story is interesting and I always love his Irish people, the Irish dialect, and the Irish traditions. But please, can't we have some less than wondrous women in his books?
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
terrible eejit, roller bag, toast person, eighth cousin, computer bag
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sara Anne, Paddy Tobin, Sara Rnne, Patrick Tobin, Uncle Gerry, Great Southern, Ronan Tobin, Salt Hill, Galway Bay, Railway Hotel, West of Ireland, Moire Fitzpatrick, Galway Tobins, Admiral's Club, Ciara Anne, Oisin O'Riordan, Pat Tobin, Sara Tobin, Ardilawn House, Ashford Castle, Gerard Tobin, Commander Warde, County Galway, Salmon Weir Bridge, Toby Tobin Junior
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Irish Love by Andrew M. Greeley
Irish Gold by Andrew M. Greeley
 

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