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567 pages, Paperback
First published July 2, 2007
The cover, plot summary and after a few chapters, the plot itself were reminiscent of Dan Brown's Robert Langdon series. Desperate situations that needed desperate measures, secret, all-power organizations with perilous vendettas with bottomless influence and resources but no analytic skills (what with trailing behind amateur detectives to figure out clues), love interests that conveniently disappear to make way for the next Bond Girl/Boy, you know the drill.
But where Robert Langdon was sharp as a tack, quick as lightning, The Last Testament's protagonist, Maggie Costello, is everything but. She, along with the eye candy, bumble about all over Jerusalem, shooting arrows into the dark, when Uri should have guessed it all along. Stupid of them, maybe, but clever of the author, giving the readers a verbal tour of the whole city.
The book was needlessly long, with unnecessary twists. I felt the author's trying to account a TV series with cliff-hangers at the end of chapters. Maybe, given the book's length, he felt that readers would read a few chapters in the shade of their night lamps before dozing off, and gave them to something to think about?
The one reason I've persisted through the endless litany is the history. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict, a burning topic to date, was centrepiece for the action. I confess to being an ignoramus when it comes to Middle Eastern history. The one takeaway from the novel is a burning interest to know more about it. One link to start with - https://www.vox.com/2018/11/20/180800...