The Messenger (Gabriel Allon Book 6)
K**S
riveting!
Loved this next book in the Gabriel Allin series. There were a few parts in particular that kept me up reading way past my bedtime so I could see what happened next. Highly recommend!
B**J
Silva does it again.
With a riveting plot and masterful story telling, once more Silva succeeds in taking Allon on a spellbinding trip to find and eliminate the evil of the terrorist ideology and intolerance.
M**L
Stellar as always.
Straight forward, brutally effective. For now a happy ending. Second time I have read this. Enjoyed it even more. Great.
J**E
An "Edge of Your Seat" Thriller!!
"The Messenger" is Daniel Silva's sixth novel in the Gabriel Allon series. I just finished this spellbinding, "edge of your seat," thriller and am amazed that the author's characters, plots and writing just seem to get stronger with each novel. A major source of strength emanates from protagonist Gabriel Allon, a brilliant Israeli art restorer, "perhaps one of the three or four most sought after restorers in the world." A complex, melancholy man who leads a double life, he has worked for years as an Israeli intelligence agent and assassin. Allon lost his wife and young son to violence, years ago, as a consequence of his own violent lifestyle. Recruited by spymaster Ari Shamron in 1972, after the Munich Olympic Games massacre, he might have been one of his generation's greatest painters had he not answered his country's call.Shamron receives credible evidence that the Vatican is targeted by Saudi Muslim fundamentalists of the Wahabist sect. Although he has been longing to retire, Allon is sent to the Holy See, ASAP, to do whatever it takes. This is not the first time he has been asked to protect the Pope. Fortunately, Gabriel does save the Pope's life. Unfortunately, a packed St. Peter's Square is bombed, and the terrorists succeed in killing hundreds of pilgrims and in destroying the Basilica.Both Allon and Shamron agree, based on the latest evidence, that the strike was planned and executed by the terrorist group Brotherhood of Allah. Their leader is Ahmed bin Shafiq, a former employee of the General Intelligence Department, Saudi's intelligence service. The Mossad and the CIA ask Gabriel to assemble a team to penetrate an organization, AAB Holdings, which appears to have taken the fanatic terrorist leader under its wing. The initials for A.B.B. belong to world renowned Saudi businessman Abdul Aziz al-Bakari, "Zizi" to his friends. He is a multi-billionaire and virtually untouchable. "Zizi" is "friendly" with a large number of the world's heads of state. His visibility and power make the team's job all the more difficult. The name of the game is "petrodollars." The Israelis and Americans select a beautiful art curator, Sarah Bancroft, to work with them and infiltrate AAB and Zizi's inner circle. She had applied, some time ago, for a position with the CIA and after an intense training period she is prepared to act as bait."The Saudi family has lots of friends in Washington - the kind of friends only money can buy. Zizi has friends as well. He's endowed academic chairs and filled them with associates and supporters. He's underwritten the creation of Arab studies departments at half a dozen major American universities. He almost single-handedly financed a major renovation of the Kennedy Center. He gives to the pet charitable projects of influential senators and invests in the business ventures of their friends and relatives." Etc. The picture should be clear.Author Daniel Silva is a man with a message and the above quotation about Zizi's, influence, as well as the influence of others like him, is part of that message. Silva spent a lot of time in the Middle East where he worked as a television news correspondent. He states in his Author's Note that "The Messenger" is inspired by truth & that Saudi Arabia's financial and doctrinal support for global Islamic terrorism is a documented fact."The Messenger" is a real page turner, filled with action and intrigue. The pace is fast and the writing excellent, as always. While one can read this novel as a stand alone, I would recommend reading at least one previous Gabriel Allon thriller first to get a full understanding of this book. Highly recommended.Jana Perskie Moscow Rules The Kill Artist The English Assassin
C**A
I have always been pleased with anything I've received from Amazon books.
I am reading the Daniel Silva book series. My library is missing this book, number 6, so as soon as I finish it I am donating it to our library so their collection will be complete. Thanks oodles.
P**L
Not disappointed
As each James Bond movie ends, there is a disclaimer that James Bond will return. So will Gabriel All on return for another thrilling adventure that keeps you wanting to read more?
A**R
Good for an Allon novel, but starting to get old
I have read all of the Gabriel Allon novels in order up to The Messenger. If you like other Allon novels, you will like this one. It's tightly plotted with lots of exciting action and we revisit some favorite recurring characters and meet a few new ones. Some of the narrative is copied directly out of previous novels in the series - the descriptions of people and some of the history. The ninth time around, I'm tired of reading it. Certain element of the plots are repetitive as well. I'm sure it's difficult to keep a long running series fresh, but in some respects it doesn't seem as though Silva is trying. It's more like he found a successful formula and is sticking with it.The heroine of The Messenger is a thirty something American woman who goes undercover for the Israelis. It says a lot about this series that when she was introduced, my first reaction was, "Ugh, another woman lovesick for Gabirel." Fortunately, that didn't happen but it highlight the main weakness in this series - it's reading more and more like a middle aged man's fantasy novel. Allon was late forties in the first book and must be mid - fifties by now, yet he's surrounded by gorgeous young women who are maybe in their early thirties, and they all fall in love with him. Despite his age he does field work, gets his ass kicked regularly, and generally is treated like a man 25 years younger. At the beginning of the story it seemed like Allon was going to be appointed as the director of operations for the office, which would make a lot of sense given his age and breadth of experience. It didn't happen and Allon is out in the field.On the personal side, the whole Chiara plot bothers me. We're told she is gorgeous and in the first novel in which she appeared she was brave and intelligent and resourceful. She's also literally young enough to be Allon's daughter, which is kind of creepy. Allon is a contempory of her father's. After becoming Allon's girlfriend, Chiara has been reduced to a prop for Gabriel. There's nothing about her life or her work. She waits for Gabriel to come home, she has sex with Gabriel, and in the previous book she nags Gabriel to divorce his mentally and physically tortured wife (because of Gabriel) to marry her. Silva has made her character shallow and somewhat unlikeable.At the beginning of The Messenger Gabriel tells his wife, Leah, he is in love with someone else but gave her up for her. Leah's response - "why would you do that, there's nothing left of me." Also, the pope plays matchmaker for Gabriel and Chiara which is bizarre given the Catholic church's views on divorce. Finally, he tells Leah he wants to marry Chiara and she accepts it calmly and then drifts conveniently back into the past. The whole thing is unbelievable, overly contrived and pulled me completely out of the story. I enjoyed the first 8 in the series, but now is a good time for me to stop.
T**D
Daniel Silva and Gabriel Allon at their very best
I've now read and reviewed all the Gabriel Allon thrillers so this review marks, for me, the end of a saga.In many ways `The Messenger' ranks as one of the best and most gripping of the entire 14 volume series - although after finishing the book I firmly believe Saudi Arabia should be at the very bottom of Daniel Silva's holiday destination list.Two attempts on the life of the Pope, a rediscovered van Gogh painting worth many millions of dollars and the funding of international jihadism are just a few of the elements that make it extremely difficult to put down the book. Ari Shamron together with some familiar members of Israeli intelligence also play a critical role whilst the American CIA are never far away.And, in the last few pages, Ari Shamron finally persuades Gabriel Allon and Chiara Zolli to sort out one or two issues completely unconnected with international terrorism, missing of Old Masters and rediscovered Impressionist paintings.Read and enjoy...
M**E
Marmite
Another Ronseal moment and considering some of the rubbish I've read recently this is a rare and special moment.Well worth the read.
D**B
Superb
This is my first on line review.I have read all other of Daniel Silva's books and was truly looking forward to this one. It is superb.I feel his style has changed slightly through the Allon series and this book sets out it's narrative in an enjoyable and tense style.Whilst his writing will never be top rated by many newspapers because of his pro-Israel standpoint, I find it refreshing to read the opposite view from what we receive via the majority of the world's media.
B**K
it works
once again it is one ovf danial silvas earlier books but what a tremendous read ,he should be praised for being up there with forsyth wambaugh m connoly tom callaghan and all the others of this ilk
M**Y
customer satisfied
book was delivered in a timely manner and the product met the description, many thanks
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