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4 Reviews
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent thriller,
By Gavin Bradshaw (New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lords' Day (Hardcover)
Michael Dobbs portrays the ultimate terrorist hostage drama which unfolds during the State opening of Parliament. The Queen and leading British politicians are held prisoner. Dobbs displays his knowledge of Westminster and its political animals - the retired politicians elevated to the House of Lords who become unlikely heroes and the maverick MP (who is, conveniently, a former member of the SAS) are very convincing. I was less convinced by the US ambassador and the hysterical female president. A good book to read on the plane.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A compelling read.,
By BookworkUK "BookwormUK" (London, UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Lords' Day (Hardcover)
The Lords' Day is a chillingly realistic thriller. The characters are multifaceted and human, faced with life and death choices and conflicting obligations. The book is an exciting mystery thriller in the tradition of the Da Vinci Code, but deals with the real and often obscure workings of the British government. A must read.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sons,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Lord's Day (Paperback)
THE LORDS' DAY by Michael Dobbs is a riveting novel that compels completion in one sitting. If I hadn't had to waste time by going to my pesky job plus performing tedious domestic chores, I would've done just that.The plot takes place sometime in the near, imaginary future. Britain's House of Lords is hijacked by eight armed Afghanis during the ceremony marking the State Opening of Parliament. The hostages taken include Queen Elizabeth II, her Prime Minister, the Cabinet, the U.S. Ambassador, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and a host of others including assorted bishops, judges and foreign dignitaries. The occupiers have only one non-negotiable demand. A thread that runs through the entire book is one of sons. Among the hostages are the Queen's eldest, Prince Charles, and the sons of the Prime Minister and the American President. The American Ambassador mourns the recent loss of his only son to a roadside bomb in Afghanistan. And the leader of the attackers, Masood, is himself the son of a notorious terrorist mastermind. The hero of the piece is Harry Jones, a Member of Parliament. Jones is also a former member of the SAS, a fact that makes him lethal like so many other Tough Guys of contemporary British fiction from the same background. (How is it that those that save the day for the Western democracies within the pages of innumerable thrillers don't come from the Royal Corps of Signals or the motorpool of the Coldstream Guards?) I particularly liked the author's attempt to delve inside the relationship existing between the only two real-life characters of the novel, the Queen and Prince Charles. Of course, one outside the family can only imagine, but as Dobbs depicts it, it must be, um, complicated. The only false note was perhaps struck by the plot twist at the end, which struck me as an effect disproportionate to the cause and somewhat implausible. However, that minor quibble isn't enough for me to knock off a star from an otherwise totally absorbing potboiler.
3.0 out of 5 stars
ok, but flawed,
By
This review is from: Lord's Day (Paperback)
Michael Dobbs once again uses his 'insider knowledge', this time to craft a hostage thriller set in the House of Lords.So on the State Opening of Parliament, terrorists manage to get in and hold The Queen, Prince Charles and an number of ambassadors and Lords hostage. As the Prime Minister is also being held, Government responsibility defaults to an ambitious but weak Junior Minister...Luckily there is Harry Jones a plucky ex-SAS MP about who provides both skills and advice to a somewhat clueless COBRA crisis team. The author provides a wide range of characterisation, including the Queen and Charles (who is show as confused and lacking confidence), and a female US President who is shown as overly emotional. I have enjoyed the author's previous works but found his style here a little clunky. Some interesting aspects of Parliament and an unusual concept for a hostage thriller, but it just didn't really come together for me. A few characters were introduced and ignored and a few threads were not followed up, and finally we are given a final twist that didn't much work for me either. So this was okay, but nothing more. Three stars (but only just). |
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The Lord's Day by Michael Dobbs (Paperback - October 18, 2007)
Used & New from: $0.78
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