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The Book of Q: A Novel
 
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The Book of Q: A Novel [Hardcover]

Jonathan Rabb (Author)
3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)


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Book Description

May 8, 2001
In his national bestseller The Overseer, Jonathan Rabb demonstrated his imaginative power and keen understanding of history with a superb thriller that dazzled critics and fans alike. The Book of Q now brings his gifts to full, stunning fruition.

Asia Minor, sixth century: After several centuries of conflict with the early Christian church, the Manichaeans, a heretical sect, vanish from the historical record.

Bosnia, 1992: Ian Pearse, a young American relief worker destined for the priesthood, has his faith tested by the horrors of war, but is jolted from his despair by a passionate affair with a Croatian woman named Petra.

Rome, present day: Father Pearse, now a researcher at the Vatican Library, comes into possession of an ancient scroll after the mysterious death of one Vatican priest and the disappearance of another. His scholar's curiosity aroused, he has the document translated by an old friend in Rome. He is stunned to learn that the scroll contains ingeniously coded letters and the text of the "Perfect Light," a Manichaean prayer that has never been found in its written form.

In the early days of the Christian church the Manichaeans had been an overly zealous, highly organized secret society, scorned by the church and seemingly driven out of existence. But these newly discovered documents indicate an earth-shattering alternate history, a long-dormant, highly evolved conspiracy carefully nurtured for centuries, and an even more important scroll hinted at in the letters that will facilitate "the great awakening."
When the pope dies of a sudden illness, Pearse is roughed up by Vatican security, who want the scroll, and when the woman who translated the prayer for him is kidnapped, he realizes that "the great awakening" is not an academic concept but something very real and dangerous. With his friend's life at stake, Pearse must find the document that holds the key to this Manichaean conspiracy.

Racing from the Vatican to Greece and back to Bosnia, Pearse has to decipher the cryptograms and codes that have been passed down for centuries from one Manichaean sect to another in the documents he finds. He is also reunited with Petra, the passionate, determined Croatian woman who has lingered in his mind since their time together in Bosnia years earlier. Together they must face a heresy that has been vigilantly guarded and cared for throughout the centuries until the time is right to unleash it on the world. And the time is now. . . .

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Father Ian Pearse leads a scholar's life within the Vatican walls, intent on ferreting out the textual complexities of Saint Ambrose's letters. But when a fellow priest gives him an ancient prayer that seems to hint at unspeakable heresy, and then mysteriously disappears, Pearse is forced from contemplation into action. The prayer is a fuse that will ignite a centuries-old conspiracy to establish a radical new church on the ruins of Catholicism, leading back to the ancient sect of Manichaeism, which held that man is equal to God and questioned the validity of Catholicism's central tenet: the Divine Resurrection. The Manichaeans are alive and well, as Pearse discovers, and have a disturbing tendency to turn up in the most unexpected of places--including the papal throne. And they have much, much bigger plans. It's up to Pearse to decipher the scroll and to follow its trail to the fountainhead of Manichaean truth. His journey will take him from an ancient Greek monastery to the scarred and bloody landscape of Bosnia, where a secret from his own past threatens to undermine his quest and his struggle to stay one step ahead of the Manichaean conspirators.

Unfortunately, so clumsily and pedantically does Rabb introduce the history behind the scroll, and so completely does he shortchange the reader when it comes to deciphering its secrets, that only the most patient and forgiving of fans will arrive at the novel's end without the sneaking sensation that this has all been a tempest in a teacup. Abstruseness is no crime, as any Umberto Eco fan will tell you. Dullness, however, is.

If you're looking for a rollickingly clever thriller that combines ancient religious politics, a mysterious power that threatens the stability of the Catholic church, and a tour of a vibrantly detailed Rome, The Story of Q isn't it. If you're looking for a thoughtful exploration of the soul-searing paradox that arises when a priest is forced to doubt the authenticity of the Resurrection, The Story of Q isn't it, either. For the former, you can't go wrong with Dan Brown's gloriously over-the-top Angels & Demons; for the latter, check out The Gospel of Judas, Simon Mawer's quietly powerful take on ancient history and contemporary mores. --Kelly Flynn

From Publishers Weekly

Recycling many of the story elements from his 1998 debut thriller, The Overseer, Rabb composes another engrossing if long-winded tale of a master plan for world domination based on the frantic search for an ancient religious scroll. The search is led by Ian Pearse, a young Catholic priest, who sets out to find the scroll after he becomes convinced that evil splinter elements in the Catholic Church may try to use it to seize power. The scroll, written in the sixth century by a since vanished religious order known as the Manichaeans, is believed to outline a strategy for bringing about worldwide religious supremacy through "one pure church." Armed with only a mysterious map that provides clues to the scroll's whereabouts, Pearse travels to remote Greek monasteries, then into war-torn Bosnia. Along the way, he encounters not only violent pursuers but also his former lover, Petra, and a son he never knew he had. Meanwhile, back in Rome, the pope suddenly dies, and a few days later, a bomb explodes in Vatican City, killing more than 100 cardinals who were set to select a new leader. Could this be the work of the long-dormant Manichaeans, at last trying to fulfill their vision by taking over the Catholic Church? Starting strong out of the gate, Rabb establishes an intriguing scenario and charges home in the final few chapters. Between start and finish, however, the story bogs down in religious detail and meandering dialogue. While annoying, the digressions don't substantially detract from a solid, hard-edged tale set in a climate of Catholic intrigue and social controversy. (May)Forecast: Off to a good start with The Overseer, Rabb loses momentum here. But this is still an above-average thriller, and national advertising and publicity should help keep sales steady, if modest.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Crown; 1st edition (May 8, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 060960483X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0609604830
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.1 x 1.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #635,115 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
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4 star:
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3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.6 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Good Solid Mediocre, January 29, 2002
By 
This review is from: The Book of Q: A Novel (Hardcover)
This really is not that good of a book. It starts out slow, speeds up very well about mid way through, then hits a serious wall when it should be climaxing. We run into old tired wishful thinking that some manuscript is going to bring down the Catholic church. (I am not a Catholic) The amount of time spent on a totally fictitious parchment that the author evidently desperately wishes existed really made finishing the book hard work for me. Jonathan Rabb is not Clancy or Grisham. The good news is that his books are only about half as long as theirs are.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars here we go again, October 10, 2001
By 
Donald J. French (New Haven, CT USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book of Q: A Novel (Hardcover)
Another rehash of the "priest-who-finds-document-which-will-change-the world" theme. Some of it was interesting, but the ending when an unearthed document has Christ speaking the most politically correct utterances ever...well, it was too much! Can someone write something original about "unearthed documents"?
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Read this for fun, not Enlightment, June 26, 2001
By 
Andy Edie (Kansas City, Missouri) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Book of Q: A Novel (Hardcover)
This book is a thriller/adventure book. Of course, that is my opinion. It is not a historical mystery or historical thriller. It is not a revelation on the true word of Christ; however, it is a small diatribe on the institution of the Catholic Church. Again, this is only my opinion.

My point being, if you like the thriller or adventure genres, then you might find this book to your liking. If you are considering this book because you find the history of the church or scriptures interesting, or you are looking to find a new, different view of the Bible, look elsewhere.

The story centers on a young priest, Ian Pearse, who gets caught up in a quest to find an ancient scroll. The Manicheans, a secret society of a Faith long thought destroyed by the Catholic Church, desperately want to find the scroll so that they may, in turn, destroy the Catholic Church with its revelations on the true word of Christ.

'The Book of Q' is, at points, far-fetched and contrived. But, hey, this IS fiction. My biggest complaint is the unnecessary detail Rabb uses in his descriptions of the various locales used in the book. Without providing maps to reference, his use of exact street names, as well as exact landmarks, often ends up being frustrating, and distracts from the story. Unless, of course, you have actually been to Vatican City and the other places described in the book.

Read this book for the adventure and suspense, not for theological extrapolations.

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