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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great conspiracy thriller
CIA operative Jack Dunphy works in London laundering money for individuals who cannot afford to use the legal methods to move money. He does other assignments for the agency. Currently, he is wire tapping the phone of Professor Leo Schindolof, an expert in Jungian philosophy. When the professor is mutilated and the tap discovered, Jack is ordered home. Upon arrival, he...
Published on December 28, 1999 by Harriet Klausner

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A wild and breakneck paced thriller
First off this book is not a "poor man's DaVinci Code" as it was originally published in 2000 prior to the DaVinci Code. Granted it has been re-issued to catch in on the religious conspiracy craze under the title the Magdalene Cipher but that is where the resemblance ends.

This novel is much more in the spy/suspense genre and the focus is around CIA operative...
Published on September 27, 2006 by James P. Lea


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19 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great conspiracy thriller, December 28, 1999
This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
CIA operative Jack Dunphy works in London laundering money for individuals who cannot afford to use the legal methods to move money. He does other assignments for the agency. Currently, he is wire tapping the phone of Professor Leo Schindolof, an expert in Jungian philosophy. When the professor is mutilated and the tap discovered, Jack is ordered home. Upon arrival, he is debriefed and assigned a tedious desk job.

Jack believes his unofficial demotion is designed to force him into resigning. He has no idea why his superiors want him to leave the agency except perhaps the link to the deceased professor. He begins some discreet checking, but his activities are noticed. Soon, attempts are made on Jackās life. As he gets closer to uncovering the truth about an internationally powerful cartel, his chances of survival geometrically drop by the hour.

Conspiracy buffs will name the publishing date of KINGDOM COME as a national holiday. Jim Hougan answers the questions about the paranormal and extraterrestrial forces at work in today's world. The global conspiracy has religious undertones, headed by a wealthy organization that hides in plain sight. Readers will cheer on the likable lead protagonist who is an every person fighting a Quixote-like quest that has no boundaries. Though the tale is filled with many surprises, Mr. Hougan never loses sight of his main theme: the truth is right here not out there.

Harriet Klausner

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kingom Come -- A Novel of Conspiracy by Jim Hougan, January 26, 2000
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This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
Jim Hougan has written a thriller that keeps you on the edge of your seat. Full of action, plot twists, and adventure, the reader follows the harrowing exploits of Jack Dunphy as he eludes CIA operatives, Corsican mobsters, and members of a secret religious society. This novel is not for the intellectually weak; the plot includes references to Carl Jung, Allen Dulles, the Apocrypha, and religious history dating from the time of Christ. Hougan has also included elements reminiscent of the Twilight Zone involving the US military and the CIA (conspiracy buffs will enjoy this). All in all, "Kingdom Come" is a treat, best enjoyed at one sitting. If you like science fiction, conspiracy, travel through Europe, and a bit of romance then this novel is for you. A thoroughly enjoyable read.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kingdom Come: A Must Read, January 7, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
This thriller by Jim Hougan is a must read-but be prepared to burn the midnight oil as it is difficult to put down and has your mind turning even as you sleep. Likeable charachters, interesting locales, a terrific plot, and a wonderfully handled unfolding of this tremendously intriguing thriller all add up to a winner of a novel. Simply terrific.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Took my head off, April 12, 2000
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This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
Jim Hougan writes with the consummate skill of someone who's published five novels, not one. (Which makes me think he has four unpublished manuscripts piled in a closet somewhere.) His technique--dialogue, action, plot pacing, setting descriptions--are perfect, detailed and believable. And unlike other Bond-like protagonists we're used to seeing, his characterizations are three-dimensional. The book is written on many levels--intellectual down to the gut-wrenching (and gut-bleeding) physical--and thus is accessible to a wide audience. It's especially suited for those of us conspiracy theorists who search for the dark underbelly of current events; Hougan has us believing that his story could be at least partially true. The cover art is, appropriately, of a labyrinth; the main character, Jack Dunphy, is like a rat trying to navigate through a strange maze of information and danger. Reading about how Dunphy gets through it--fake passports, sneaky bank transactions, and the occasional dagger flashing from the cloak--is worth the price in eye strain and lost sleep.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Poorer Man's DaVinci Code, March 11, 2004
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Whether writting under his psuedonym John Case with his wife, or going solo, Jim Hougan has a definite gift for creating likeable characters who get caught up in the unexpected while carrying out seemingly dronelike yet out of the ordinary jobs. Hougan's main man in "Kingdom Come", Jack Dunphy has been relegated to glorified information gopher at Langley after having been pulled off an undercover assignment in London after the death of an Oxford Professor of Jungian psychology whom he had under surveillance. Dunphy's annoyance at being yanked from his cozy nest with British sweetie Clementine enhanced by the frustratingly endless grunt work of public information gathering lead him to buck the system and uncover the relevance of the professor's death. What he discovers is a Gordian knot of intrigue that eventually threatens his life and the lives of anyone with whom he comes into contact.

As Dunphy plows through clues that take him all over Europe, the reader breathlessly turns page after page, liking Dunphy and his cohorts immediately. The facts that he uncovers make for fascinating reading---puzzlers will enjoy being thrown information seemingly straight out of left field. Unfortunately, as the story leads into its ultimate denouement, it becomes choppy, the ending sequences beginning at the estate within the Swiss National Park and the ending voyage at sea seem rushed and not fully thought out, as if the author had run out of steam and simply wanted to finish the story under 400 pages. The last paragraph leads the reader to believe some sort of transference has taken place, but obviously this is certainly not developed and there seems no hint of a part two where the reader can stretch his imagination further.

Kingdom Come utilizes themes that have become familiar territory after the publication of the very popular "DaVinci Code". But in as much as that novel also rushes the reader in and out of intriguing snippets of history replete with secret societies, it does come to a fairly complete, if not predictable, conclusion--not so with "Kingdom Come"---the protoganists accomplish their missions, but the ending seems to grasp at something not quite touched upon in the main body of the work. I would have liked to have read more information regarding the gentleman introduced at the tail end of the novel, perhaps even a concurrent historical story running parallel to the actual action tale. Perhaps then, I would have felt that the ending had some meaning in terms of this gentleman's characterization and overall fit into the overall scheme of things. The focus should have been on him and not the Pound/Dulles affair showcased by the author. As with the "John Case" selections, Hougan again seems to fall into the trap of simply using his book to over-instruct his readers on trivia that while fun has little to do with the overall outcome of the story. Providing a reading guide at the back of the book would definitely be a plus for those readers who want more information and do wish to read further.

Nevertheless Hougan presents a great page-turner for at least 7/8's of the book's journey and I will recommend it with some reluctance to anyone who likes a quick read with some fun historical mysteries thrown in.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Where's his next novel?, November 22, 2000
This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
All I can say is - Jim Hougan, bring on the next novel, and do it fast! I've read a few of his non-fiction CIA books, and now wonder why he wasn't writing fiction sooner. I just happened to be reading Ludlum's latest, PROMETHEUS DECEPTION, when I started to get bored and picked this one up instead. Wow. Talk about a study in contrasts. Everything about Hougan's book topped Ludlum's tired old prose; this was a cerebral, suspenseful, well-told story. It took me just a day to finish it. The main hero, Jack Dunphy, is terrificaly written, and I love Hougan's sense of dialogue. My only real complaint is the lack of a satisfying ending. I don't know what I was expecting, but that wasn't it.

But I also have to say no author has ever used the "Freedom of Information Act" as such a clever plot-point. When I realized what Hougan was up to, the astonished smile never left my face.

What's REALLY interesting about this book though, is reading between the lines. Based on Hougan's past investigations of the intelligence community, one has to seriously wonder if the inspiration for this novel doesn't have some basis in real-life. If I were Hougan, my first fiction book would be about some cool tidbit I picked up during my research, and tucked away for the day I wrote the novel. (Makes you go, "hmmm....")

If I was a betting man, I'd wager that's exactly what KINGDOM COME is -- fiction veiling some larger truth or rumor Hougan heard about. If so, what a truly weird world we live in!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars fast paced fusion, February 7, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
My favorite thing about this novel is how Hougan welds together the angst/power of several "genre" categories: political thriller, spy book, science thrillers and even Stephen King like "super" natural thrillers (though done concretely). Also, nobody writing thrillers today has a better, more informed view of Cloak & Dagger wielders than Hougan. He takes all that detail and ideas and melds them into a really smooth, fluid prose style. His central woman character is great, too, which always helps an action thriller. This is the kind of novel that's so unique, you remember it long after the last close of the cover.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A couple of flaws, but good momentum, January 30, 2002
By A Customer
Enjoyed this book, look hopefully forward to some kind of sequel. Main character Jack Dunphy was interesting and humanized (though I don't see the comparison to Bond at all). Good tying together of the messianic mythology. Dunphy makes a couple of dumb mistakes though, that I found hard to believe he would make, even during (or especially during) the heat of the chase. Still, started and finished it in one night, so must have been pretty good!
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Kingdom Come, the ultimate conspiracy, February 4, 2000
This review is from: Kingdom Come (Hardcover)
Don't judge a book by its cover, or for that matter, the first two chapters. It takes about that long before the action starts in this book and once the ball is rolling, it doesn't stop until you slam into the last page and then notice it is 2am and you haven't eaten dinner. If you've read any of his other works of non-fiction, you will know that his take on the CIA is well studied, and he gives us the same clear perspective on the world of the CIA in this book, only this time the dry 'facts' are interwoven with a story and characters that make it come right off the pages. The book has it's gory moments- shootings, violence and a full array of swear words, for those that might be swemish about those things, but the main focus of the book is on unravelling a mystery that grow with each new clue. I won't spoil the ending or the middle, but I recommend it as a good read for those who like a book that makes them 'think' a little.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Book!, July 26, 2001
By 
Melvin Hunt (Cleveland,, Texas United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book was a tad different from your usual spy novel.Our hero Jack Dunphy gets demoted when a subject he has under surveillance is killed. Through his new job he runs upon some deeply hidden secrets that the C.I.A. wants no one to know.This leads into a wild journey for Jack and his girlfriend Clementine. They wind up in Sweden at a secret C.I.A. compound where many stunning secrets are stored. Dunphy ,after his hitch at the compound is forced to go on the run. Every knid of phenomena on

earth has been done by the C.I.A. The existance of a secret society is also brought to light. Buy this book and you will be treated to an interesting read.

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Kingdom Come
Kingdom Come by Jim Hougan (Hardcover - January 4, 2000)
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