Saturday, April 3, 2010

Angelology - by Danielle Trussoni



from the Barnes and Noble Website...

Synopsis
A thrilling epic about an ancient clash reignited in our time- between a hidden society and heaven's darkest creatures

There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bore children to them.
Genesis 6:5

Sister Evangeline was just a girl when her father entrusted her to the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration in upstate New York. Now, at twenty-three, her discovery of a 1943 letter from the famous philanthropist Abigail Rockefeller to the late mother superior of Saint Rose Convent plunges Evangeline into a secret history that stretches back a thousand years: an ancient conflict between the Society of Angelologists and the monstrously beautiful descendants of angels and humans, the Nephilim.

For the secrets these letters guard are desperately coveted by the once-powerful Nephilim, who aim to perpetuate war, subvert the good in humanity, and dominate mankind. Generations of angelologists have devoted their lives to stopping them, and their shared mission, which Evangeline has long been destined to join, reaches from her bucolic abbey on the Hudson to the apex of insular wealth in New York, to the Montparnasse cemetery in Paris and the mountains of Bulgaria.

Rich in history, full of mesmerizing characters, and wondrously conceived, Angelology blends biblical lore, the myth of Orpheus and the Miltonic visions of Paradise Lost into a riveting tale of ordinary people engaged in a battle that will determine the fate of the world.


What did I think?
I thought the beginning was great as well as the ending but the middle was just one big info dump for me. The book begins in the present (sort of 1999). It moved well and was excited that I found a great read - then the story shifts to 1944 and this is where the author lost me - so I did my speed reading thing until I came back to present day (again sort of 1999)and was rewarded with a great ending.

So should you read it? Yes.

2 comments:

  1. I typically don't like books that jump around. Susan Wiggs does it sometimes, and since I love her stories I tolerate it.

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  2. Thanks Liz. the book sounds interesting.

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