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Lost Tribe.

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In a volatile African country American journalist Ben Chase joins the unusual expedition of David Mather, a relief worker who believes that a mysterious group of nomads--the Maji--are the descendants of the Lost Tribes of Israel. Together with a handful of others, Mather and Chase travel through a war-torn region to find the Maji. But when the search for the veiled tribe draws the group into the hostile Northern District, Chase must balance Mather's apocalyptic vision with his own changing perception of this dangerous landscape.

Paperback

First published June 1, 1998

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About the author

Mark Lee

121 books33 followers
Mark Lee is a highly regarded novelist, playwright, journalist and children's book author.

You can learn more on his author website: http://www.markwlee.com

Or read a short Wikipedia entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Le...

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5 stars
7 (31%)
4 stars
8 (36%)
3 stars
2 (9%)
2 stars
4 (18%)
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1 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Amy.
694 reviews16 followers
April 29, 2009
It was Ok, unfortunately the way this is written I really didn't care about the characters like I should have.
Profile Image for Taylor Riggs.
24 reviews1 follower
September 17, 2019
*Spoiler Alert... Kinda*


All in all, I enjoyed reading this. But if I take it section by section, I was intrigued with the beginning, gripped with the middle, and incredibly disappointed with the end. I felt like from the beginning it was building to some climatic ending where the lead character discovers himself, where the book would culminate in some heart wrenching prose about humanity and our constant quest to discover something greater. It did not end that way. It ended in a very depressing way that had me asking "why?".
Not why in a way that makes you search yourself for some defining answer, but in a way that genuinely has you asking "what was the point of that ending?".
Maybe I missed some thing with it, maybe it's like one of those Sundance films where it doesn't make sense and doesn't really have an ending with a point, but some people cry at the beauty of it. If it is, I will say I don't get those, so that's probably why I didn't get this.
I gave it 4 stars because I loved the rest of the book so much, I felt joined into the mission and the danger, and it made me want to go on a mission trip.
If there was one thing I could say you could get from the book, it's this: as Christians, we tend to think God wants us to unravel the universe and save the entirety of the world. That he wants us to hunt down people lost in time and history in his name and be the ones to bring their secrets and dreams to light. He doesn't. Those are more self serving purposes, things that make us feel important, things that make us feel needed above others. God just wants us to serve. Serve those homeless with sandwiches on the corner. Serve the poor who need water. Serve the sick who need help. Serve the lonely who need a listening ear. Serve the lost who are roaming the world looking for a sense of home. Just serve. We all aren't meant for world changing adventures, more often than not, we're just meant to help in little ways. Because little things matter more than anyone realizes.
Profile Image for Lauren Rev.
60 reviews
January 14, 2023
This novel follows the main character, Ben Chase, through an unnamed modern day African country. He and his compatriots work as relief agents bringing water to a drought-riddled part of the country while serendipitously searching for an elusive African tribe, the Maji, who may or may not be a lost tribe from Israel.

As others have written, I immensely enjoyed the adventurous plot until the end. The group battled nature and other people groups in the region, both colonial & native representations. There were also conflicts within the entourage. However, it fizzled and left many questions unanswered. The main mystery, the history of the Maji tribe was not answered.

Also the characters did not seem developed. I did not experience any particular joy when good things happened to them or sorrow for misfortune. In the end everyone else in the traveling party died or disappeared. And I found that I didn’t really care.

Given the authors knowledge of Uganda as a foreign news correspondent, I had hoped that it would have been set in that country. Not a major point, as the details of the story were descriptive enough and did give a sense of place. Just a personal preference.

The protagonist made it out alive to discover that to find the meaning of life he did not have to travel reporting on world events, just make peanut butter sandwiches for those less fortunate in the neighborhood.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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