I've read several of this series and they were real good and very interesting with a bookclub that I was in. Was so glad that I read 'The Damascus Countdown' last, as it filled-in all the missing pieces of the battle between a false messiah, and his caliphate cronies against Israel. It was refreshing to read Middle Eastern events come alive, as if they were straight out of the New York Times, with a comparative narrative straight out of Biblical prophecy. I'm hoping there is a sequel, but will be content with this tear-jerking finale. It was refreshing to see characters from all walks of life see, meet and either accept or reject Jesus Christ in the context of their own lives. In a nutshell, you have Iranians, Muslims, atheists, agnostics, extremists, mid-Western Americans, spies, government heads and their intelligent agencies thrown into this mix. Thoroughly appreciated the 'David Shirazi' character - seeking truth, justice and 'doing the right thing', even in the face of his government's unwillingness to support Israel or his role in stopping another holocaust.
All eyes are on the Middle East. Israel has successfully launched a first strike on Iran, taking out all of their nuclear sites and six of their nuclear warheads - and causing The Twelfth Imam to order a full-scale retaliation. US President William Jackson threatens to support a UN Security Council resolution condemning the Jewish State for unprovoked and unwarranted acts of aggression.Meanwhile, CIA operative David Shirazi has infiltrated the Iranian regime and intercepted information indicating that two Iranian nuclear warheads survived the attack and have been moved to a secure and undisclosed location. In danger not only from the ongoing missile strikes on Iran but also from the increasingly hostile and suspicious governments of multiple countries, David and his team are in a race against time to find the remaining nuclear warheads before disaster strikes.
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This finishes the trilogy of "The Twelth Imam". What a way to finish. Set primarily in the Middle East, and at times in the U.S. this final installment sees CIA operative David, continuing to stay within the Mahdi's inner circle, but as the book progresses, he is more outside this circle, and his special ops colleagues are tasked to find the 2 missing nukes and disarm them. Needless to say very detailed scenes, with a lot of political and war-time decisions, of what to do, what not to do.
There is a lot of geography of the Middle East, mentioned in this book, especially, Iran, and Syria. So, it makes you want to follow along on a map where everyone is.
There are at least 10-15 central characters in this series, and like other authors, I appreciated Rosenberg listing them before the first chapter, as I had to reference them from time to time.
It's amazing and great, that someone can weave a story like this, without using any curse word, or having any sex scenes. There is some violence, but not over the top.