Sunday, October 29, 2017

THE CONFESSOR




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The Confessor, Daniel Silva, G P Putnam's Sons, 2003, 393 pp

Summary from Goodreads:
Munich: The writer Benjamin Stern entered his flat to see a man standing there, leafing through his research, and said, "Who the hell are you?" In response, the man shot him. As Stern lay dying, the gunman murmured a few words in Latin, then he gathered the writer's papers and left.
Venice: The art restorer Gabriel Allon applied a dab of paint carefully to the Bellini, then saw the boy approaching, a piece of paper in his hand. It would be about Stern, he knew. They would want him to leave right away. With a sigh, the Mossad agent began to put his brushes away.
The Vatican: The pope known as Paul VII - "Pope Accidental," to his detractors - paced in the garden, thinking about the things he knew and the enemies he would make. He believed he understood why God had chosen him for this job, but the road in front of him was hard and exceedingly perilous. If he succeeded, he would revolutionize the church. If not, he might very well destroy it - and himself.

My Review:
Daniel Silva's third novel in his Gabriel Allon series takes place mainly in Rome, where a new (fictional) Pope has plans to reveal the complicity between the Catholic Church and the Nazis during WWII as regards the Final Solution. It is a gripping and well-written thriller.

I am enjoying this series because it gives me insight into the Jewish point of view, at least as regards the Israeli secret service. Truthfully, as I have learned in the many spy thrillers I have read, the secret service of any nation at any time is about as reliable as the governments of the countries served. Dirty deeds and assassinations, carried out in the interests of power and domination, not always based on completely accurate intelligence or good foresight, make for moral ambiguity by the bucketload. 

As it turns out, a controversy has been raging for years in real life between the Catholic Church and Israel as to the role of the Vatican in forwarding the aims of Hitler's Third Reich. The official line of the Church, to this day, is a denial of any complicity in the Holocaust while certain Israeli officials work to expose it.

Naturally, Daniel Silva has told the Israeli side of the story. Given that the persecution of Jews has gone on for centuries, I am inclined to believe his version. Read it and decide for yourself if you are interested.

(The Confessor is available in various formats by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)

8 comments:

  1. Did you like it? This one was, I believe, my least favorite in the series, but there's nothing wrong with it, quite the contrary. It is that so much of the role of the Catholic Church those days is not known...

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    1. I liked it because it gave me much to think about.

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  2. I've found this series intriguing, also, and this book will be the next one of Silva's that I read, probably early next year. I enjoyed your review.

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    1. Thank you Dorothy. I hope you enjoy the book as well.

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  3. I should make time for Daniel Silva and his Gabriel Allon series though so far I haven't. I'm sure I'd like one per year. This one takes on some probing issues!

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    1. I am glad I got into this series. So many series to love. One a year is a good plan!

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  4. Hi Judy, this looks like a goodie. Please bring this over to Books You Loved: November so everyone can see it. Cheers from Carole's Chatter

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    1. Thanks Carole! Did it this morning.

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