A Modern Philosophical Thriller that Entertains, Inspires, and Provokes Further Thought
The Lotus Assassin is a thriller spanning continents and cultures that has at its core much more than a fast-paced mystery plot. Its staggeringly ambitious aim is to build all of that plot around a deep exploration of family, theology, cultural mores, sacred objects, human motives, material delusion, and the nature and purpose of human striving—and amazingly, it manages all that w/out getting dry, preachy, or abstract, either!
Taking a cue from the Bhagavad Ghita, Angsten is deeply interested in the call of dharma, or duty. While spinning through the interactions of a parade of killers, scientists, beautiful women, undercover state actors, and fanatical religious fundamentalists, Angsten looks deep into what pushes men to take on the hero’s journey dharma requires—and examines the nature of the attendant courage men tap to do it.
“Courage is being scared to death, but saddling up anyway,” John Wayne is reputed to have said. He’s not quoted in the book, but if you read to the end you’ll find it touches on similar thought from Rumi, Stephen Crane, Amelia Earhart, Lord Krishna, and expounded on by a key character named Anand, among others.
There aren’t many books—much less Indiana-Jones like thrillers—where you’ll find protagonists convincingly passing off G.K. Chesterton quotes as ones from the Buddha to win over allies. But that’s probably because there aren’t many writers with Angsten’s scope of knowledge: He’s familiar with Hindu theology, Buddhist tradition, Catholic thought, as well as Islamic culture and Koranic scripture.
Masterful writing delivers the plot from scene to scene. You’ll read of the “hazy half-light of the soma-moon sun,” of “sacerdotal warriors and sybaritic spies,” of how “the guttural dirge of the monks droned on, a zombie din of death.” Or how: “fear now came alive in me, the hairy worm erupting like a chrysalis in birth. Cracking, unfreezing, it burst in fluttering spasms through my belly and my limbs, wings beating frantically, urging me to run away.”
Then there’s the historical stuff. There was, in fact, a Hungarian archaeologist named Aurel Stein excavated certain remains in 1901 that appear in the book …. and there are dozens of tangents like these you can explore as you make your way through the book to fascinate, divert, and enrich your knowledge of the world.
Good stuff.
Great stuff, even!
Highly recommended for thinkers.