"Nine" by Rachelle Dekker is an impressive, fast-paced novel. The action starts with the opening scene, and it doesn't ever seem to let up. Even when characters are taking a break and just talking to each other, that never-ending sense of tension is still there. Some thrillers seem to be "all action, no real substance", but that definitely is NOT the case here. Rachelle Dekker is very skilled at keeping the plot moving along while never easing off on the important personal details that make this story so much more than a typical action/adventure.
The three main characters (Zoe, a small-town waitress with a mysterious past; Lucy, a teenager with no memory of her own past; and Seeley, an agent with a complicated past) are all incredibly well drawn and detailed. I enjoyed learning more about each of them as the story progressed, and felt like I truly "knew" all three by the book's end.
Once you finish enjoying all the action and see what happens to the characters at the end, you can take a deep breath and realize.....all that excitement wasn't REALLY what the book was about at all. The riveting storyline was the backdrop for an exploration of the theme of how much your past does or does not influence your present. As each character moves through this adventure, he or she contemplates the past and thinks about its effects on who they are in the present. Each also considers, in his/her own way, whether or not there's anything they can do about the past, and whether it's possible to write a new narrative for the future.
This is a work of Christian fiction. God is definitely present throughout the story, but more in His "still, small voice" form than in more overt ways. Personally, I liked seeing how the characters responded to God speaking to them, even if they didn't really know Him. As a Christian, I walked away with some important things to think after reading this book.
One note: While this is definitely a Christian book, some hard-core things take place. People get shot, people die, people are tortured. Nothing overly graphic in the descriptions, but if violence is a trigger for you, please be aware that you'll find some in this novel. I thought everything was appropriate and important to the plot, not just thrown in gratuitously, and did not detract from the message.
All in all, I loved the story. Five out of five slices of perfectly-aged Provolone.