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The Righteous Men
The Righteous Men

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Author: Sam Bourne
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy Used: £0.01
You Save: £6.98 (100%)



New (39) from £1.59

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 109 reviews
Sales Rank: 1723

Media: Paperback
Pages: 576
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7 x 4.1 x 1.5

ISBN: 0007203306
EAN: 9780007203307
ASIN: 0007203306

Publication Date: June 19, 2006
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Righteous Men
  • Audio CD - The Righteous Men
  • Audio Cassette - The Righteous Men
  • Unknown Binding - The Righteous Men
  • Unknown Binding - The Righteous Men
  • Hardcover - The Righteous Men
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Righteous Men
  • Unknown Binding - The Righteous Men
  • Audio CD - The Righteous Men
  • Audio Cassette - The Righteous Men
  • Paperback - The Righteous Men
  • Paperback - The Righteous Men

Similar Items:

  • The Last Testament
  • The Final Reckoning
  • The Alexander Cipher
  • Relentless
  • Sword of God

Customer Reviews:   Read 104 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Enjoy !   September 14, 2008
This did'nt get me from the first page but once I got into the story I could'nt put it down. I did guess though who the baddie in the book was long before the end and having studied theology I did know where this book was going but that did'nt spoil it for me, I was gripped !
If you are a thriller ( with a theological stance ) buff, just enjoy this for what it is, a fine good read !



2 out of 5 stars Yom Kipp-er......z z z z z ! ! !   September 13, 2008
 0 out of 1 found this review helpful

Another wannabee Da Vinci Code which misses the target by a long way I'm afraid....

This book was lying on my desk at work, a colleague picked it up and said "Ah. Dan Brown's written another book at last". An easy mistake to make, with the identical title font and background religious symbols. Even the author's name, Sam Bourne, is short and monosyllabic, easily mistaken for Brown's as happened with my colleague. A cynical marketing ploy that grates with me and no doubt many others. I thought pseudonyms had gone out with Lewis Carroll. Why not put your own name to your own work, Mr Jonathan Freedland ? Name not "catchy" enough?

If you think I'm banging on about Dan Brown/DVC comparisons that is because the blurb invites it and insists it is "more menacing" and better. Comparisons are made on the front and back covers and several times on the inside page. See my point..?

Anyway, Dan Brown gripes aside, this is not a very good book. It has an ok plot that is dragged out across over 500 pages, with few twists and turns and little intrigue. Our "hero's" quest to find his kidnapped wife makes little sense and is convoluted in the extreme. The bad guy is easily guessed before half way and as for menace, well the Andrex puppy is more menacing than the "sinister" assassins in this. Afraid, to offend any religious groups, Freedland misses opportunity after opportunity to create fear and suspense; even the murderers are humane and pray for their victims. The "blue eyed" killer is no match for Brown's albino monk and the other characters all fall into neat stereotypes. When Will Monroe discovers who his kidnappers are very early on, rather than call the police or point a gun to their head he skulks off on his own following a trail led by ridiculous text messages from a "friend". His (stunningly attractive, naturally) sidekick is close to the kidnappers and suspects their motives all along also but keeps it from him for some reason.

Freedland insults our intelligence with junior school coded messages to crack which eventually lead the charisma-free Mr Monroe back to where he started from. With time running out, why "the friend" did not just send him there in the first place beats me. You feel like you've driven 20 miles to visit your neighbour by the time you arrive at the climax. The ending redeems the book somewhat but the journey there is unexciting, overblown and frankly dull in parts.

Dan Brown's publishers will not be losing too much sleep about Jonathan Freedland, oops I mean Sam Bourne.



4 out of 5 stars Not bad at all   September 7, 2008
I wish that people would stop touting books as "successor to Dan Brown". Dan Brown is still alive and writing. Sam Bourne is somebody else (actually he really is someone else, Sam Bourne is a pen name) and has a different style of writing.

This book was not bad at all. Shortish chapters for those of us with short attention spans, believeable characters and, although the plot turns out to be a bit far fetched, a good yarn.

I get bored with novels quite easily but this one went right to the end, one of those where you really do want to know what happened.



3 out of 5 stars Slightly More Believable   August 20, 2008
I preferred this book to The Last Testament as it was less contrived and didn't seem to wander as much. Bourne sticks more to the central plot, although at times it can become rather rambling and I'm not sure how many more meaning of life type code books I want to read.

This is a decently written thriller, however, with a fairly taut plot and well researched background into the Jewish faith amongst other things. At times I tended to lose interest but at least the author always brought me back and the final few chapters flew by and the ending wasn't as disappointing as some I have read this year.

The plot is pretty implausible, however, although I won't give it away for those still to read the book. I found the characters much more believable than in The Last Testament and Bourne seemed to be more comfortable with them here. I suggest if you don't expect too much, but enjoy a fast paced thriller, this is decent enough.



5 out of 5 stars People are strange!   August 4, 2008
 0 out of 2 found this review helpful

Strange. Why? Simple. What do you look for in a book? Good story, interesting characters, flowing narrative and above all a page turner? Well this book ticks all and every box. I love Dan Brown's books. But they are completely different in style. Why compare? Just enjoy them both. Strange because some people love to criticise. Gets their blood running faster. Why not be honest and say this is not my kind of book. But to say you like Dan Brown but not this is stupid. Why not say that as I'm not Jewish I couldn't relate to the content. Fair enough. Just so happens I am and I do but I can see how someone might not although I had no problem with Dan Brown's books. I found I could not stop reading it. You don't like it then fine but don't be childish about it.



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