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Lost City of the Templars
Lost City of the Templars
Sep 21, 2024 8:28 PM

Author:Paul Christopher

Lost City of the Templars

The latest rip-roaring adventure thriller from Paul Christopher featuring John Holliday and his search for the Templar Order.

Retired Army Ranger turned historian John Holliday has thwarted the plots of Rex Deus, the twenty-first-century incarnation of the Templars, all over the world. Now, the lost journal of explorer Percy Fawcett leads Holliday deep into the South American jungles on a quest to uncover the greatest mystery of the Middle Ages ...

Trailed by an infamous tomb raider and menaced by a tribe of hostile natives, Holliday and his crew uncover a five-hundred-year-old society hidden in the cauldron of the Amazon. Descendants of the Templar Knights, they exist for one reason: to hide and protect the holy artefact taken from the original Temple of Jerusalem by the first Templars: the legendary Ark of the Covenant. Will Holliday's obsession with the truth finally kill him?

Lost City of the Templars is Paul Christopher's latest action-packed conspiracy thriller that will take readers to the heart of an ancient secret society.

Paul Christopher is the pseudonym of a bestselling US novelist who lives in the Great Lakes region.

Reviews

Rollicking, globe-hopping, timely and prescient . . . this first novel just blows the doors off

—— C. J. Box

Smart, edgy, fast-paced storytelling at its best

—— Alafair Burke

From the first page it pulls you into a compellingly suspenseful story and delivers it at a breakneck pace

—— Alex Grecian

Fans of 'Homeland' and '24' will love The Pattern of Fear - a rocket of a thriller that's fresh and cool and totally real

—— Joseph Finder, New York Times bestselling author of Paranoia and Buried Secrets

Darkly compelling murder mystery., the novel is also a densely layered engagement with questions of politics, spirituality, environmentalism and meta fiction. It is an incredible book; its echoes sound long after the end has been reached

—— Big Issue

An intersection between horror story, morality tale, feigned memoir and ecological satire

—— Times Literary Supplement

Tackles the question of what lies beyond with wit and subtlety

—— Herald

The atmosphere of Glister is sustained by Burnside's distinctive and widely praised prose style, spare but ruminative, full of ideas and unusual formulations

—— Irish Times

Burnside burns most brilliantly when he allows himself free rein to become a prophet of the natural sublime... The world of this chilling novel is steeped in a nature so finely drawn that it aches with its pulsing, crippled mortality

—— Independent

Puts him in the class of Hardy and Lawrence

—— The Times

The unrelenting evocation of toxicity is remarkable

—— Guardian

a taut, mystical thriller and a thoughtful meditation on humanity

—— Daily Telegraph

Burnside's story uses suggestion and ambiguity rather than explicit statement, but has the power that comes from leaving plenty of space in which the reader's imagination can go to work

—— Sunday Times

remarkable, genre-defying...Glister is a remarkable book...a fusion of styles and genres, and it succeeds magnificently on those terms...powerfully imagines and beautifully written...A haunting tale, not as depressing as you might expect, and highly recommended

—— www.bookgeeks.co.uk

Writing 'this dreamy melange of gritty urbanism with poetic crime puzzler, will appeal to the right reader very highly

—— The Book Bag

A dark fable

—— Sunday Herald

Burnside's writing conveys an almost palpable thrill of discovery, a delight in the play of his imagination over this bleak terrain, an irrepressible joy in cultivating metaphor after metaphor and seeing them all, improbably, bloom...The emotion this brilliant and disturbing novel leaves you with is like the spooked feeling Leonard experiences...It takes your breath away, but you don't know if that comes from awe or terror. The Glister" is that kind of story. It's terrifying, and it feels like a gift.

—— www.nytimes.com

I'm a year late (quite punctual, for me) in recommending John Burnside's austerely poetic novel

—— Guardian
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