Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book
Rate this book
In this first book in the Principalities and Powers series, Israel has just attacked Iran’s nuclear facilities, triggering a chain of potentially cataclysmic events around the planet. Will leaders and the "salt of the earth" - great and small - be able to intervene before events spin out of control? Nash Lee, an NGO entrepreneur, is determined to make a difference through his worldwide ivillage network. Kim Grace, a nuclear scientist imprisoned in North Korea’s secret Camp 16, knows the truth about the devastating technology she helped develop. Anshel Gould, the brilliant chief of staff at the White House, has created a radical peace plan based on the long-forgotten UN proposal for Palestine after the Second World War. But is there a way to stop what seems unstoppable? What Iran, Israel, North Korea, and other earthly principalities and powers decide next could lead to global confrontation. . . .

Based on extensive research about the coming global conflicts surrounding Israel
and the leaders who will shortly play important roles in those conflicts, the Principalities & Powers series also confronts the biggest issue facing the Christian church today—its historical role as the "salt of the earth," preserving the planet from corruption at critical moments in world history.

367 pages, Paperback

First published October 1, 2010

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Jeff Nesbit

35 books65 followers
JEFF NESBIT was the public affairs chief for five Cabinet departments or agencies under four presidents and the communications director to former GOP Vice President Dan Quayle. He was most recently the assistant secretary for public affairs at HHS and the deputy commissioner for communications at the Social Security Administration in the Biden-Harris administration.
Nesbit was also the founder and executive director of Climate Nexus; a nationally recognized climate communications non-profit; and a strategic communications advisor to media, health, science, tech, academic, corporate and non-profit clients including the Discovery Channel networks, Yale University, Lockheed Martin, the American Heart Association, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Porter Novelli and the American Red Cross.
He has been a contributing writer to The New York Times, Time magazine and Axios, and wrote a weekly science, health and tech column called “At the Edge” for U.S. News & World Report for nearly a decade. He’s written 33 books, including Poison Tea and This is the Way the World Ends with St. Martin’s Press.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
12 (25%)
4 stars
14 (29%)
3 stars
20 (41%)
2 stars
2 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Nora St Laurent.
1,674 reviews115 followers
July 8, 2015
In the back of the book there’s a Q & A section that will make your hair stand at attention, make your heart race and will also bring the reader to their knees at the urgency to pray for peace in Israel. I’m thankful to have received a review copy of such a timely book. Reading the interview, one realizes just how real most of the events in Peace are and some events are close to happening. .

The author says, “At no other time in history have the stakes been so high. Individuals and nations-states contend for power and control of the earth, and Israel is at the very center struggle.” Jeff Nesbit has been a national journalist for many years. Who better to write Peace and give us an insight through eyes that have been in similar situations. Jeff pens a master chess match with very powerful pieces on this board of life, playing a dangerous game, with all its members racing to take over the world. There is no “do-over” button in this game...only massive destruction.

Jeff Nesbit answers questions such as "Is a Fisson-Fusion-Fission Doomsday bomb like the one in the novel built by North Korea – really possible?" Unfortunately, it is possible…..

"Is Iran, in fact, building secret uranium-enrichment facilities inside revolutionary guard compounds throughout Iran?" Yes, in at least one instance….

"Is it really possible to develop a world wide text-message network with data bases, media and messaging that work even in repressive, totalitarian countries?" Yes, absolutely….

"Would Israel really consider the use of tactical nuclear weapons to destroy Iran’s nuclear weapons plants bunkered inside Iran’s revolutionary guards’ compounds?" According to published reports in the Times of London…Israel has drawn up plans to use tactical nuclear weapons…

When I looked at the map inside the book I’m amazed at the small size of Israel and the fighting that’s gone on over that country. Alas, this is a Holy war and the fight is against principalities and powers, not flesh and blood! It’s a fascinating and scary read when you realize most of the information in this book is real and/or close to happening.

You can’t rush through reading Peace or you’ll be lost. The author marks the top of each chapter with the location, so the reader knows where this chapter will take place. I had to stay focused in order to grasp all the author had to share. I’m not a history buff nor do I daily keep up with current events, so I struggled a little and consulted my husband, who is on top of current affairs, to verify many points in this book that didn’t seem real to me. But to my dismay, they were. Jeff Nesbit was a national journalist and the director of public affairs in Washington, D.C. He sees and understands the global picture, has seen and experienced far more than he’s put in this book I’m sure and explains the big picture of world events in a very unique and interesting way. This is the first book in the series...oh, my, buckle up your seat belt and get ready for his second book. I’m sure it will prove to be just as enlightening and make the reader realize that through technology the planet is a very small place; there are eyes and ears tracking information everywhere! It also reminded me that we need to pray for those in authority. Pray that they can decipher this information and determine what is “real”. That is the rub!

Disclosure of Material Connection:
I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising”

Nora St.Laurent
The Book Club Network www.bookfun.org
The Book Club Network blog www.psalm516.blogspot.com
Book Fun Magazine www.bookfunmagazine.com
Profile Image for Lisa.
99 reviews
September 23, 2015
This book was about politics and nuclear war. it was a bit more political than I was expecting but I enjoyed it
Profile Image for Daniel Munguia.
7 reviews
January 4, 2018
Peace was a fiction book with a lot of real world fact and scenarios that kept you in suspense at what would happen next. It reminds me of how much we need to pray for peace.
Profile Image for Michael.
78 reviews1 follower
December 30, 2014
It was alright. The story was well told, but I didn't find the pacing to be to my liking. Might try the next book in the series, I'm just not sure yet.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews