I downloaded this book to read while cycling in Iceland’s wind and rain.
I had it easy compared to Trevor. 😀
At age-21, Trevor cycled 1800 miles down the west coast of Canada and the USA on a second-hand bike he had bought for around £20.
10 years later — in 1999 — he wanted more. Patagonia to Alaska .
His companion crapped out after the first few days. Trevor was alone.
His bicycle was terrible. No mobile phone. Very little money.
What’s different about this book compared with other similar adventures, is how honest and vulnerable the author is about all the many, many things that go wrong. You really feel the highs and lows.
The mystery concerns a long-ago triple — or was it quadruple? — suicide in a London cult, involving a leader self-styled as the Angel Gabriel.
The cult was called the Apperton Angels.
Leader Gabriel survived but is in prison for life for another murder.
Amanda Bailey, a terrier-like true-crime author, decides to write a retrospective book focused on the baby in the incident who will soon be turning age-18.
The Angels had believed that baby was the Antichrist. They had planned to sacrifice the child to save the world. Happily, the mother ran off with it.
The story is told using something called the “Dossier Method”.
It’s simple: background information is revealed about a principal character via two or more side characters looking over written text—tweet, Facebook post, Instagram post, DM, etc. —about said principal character and discussing it.
The book feels more like the outline of a planned book.
It gets even more complicated when a second journalistdecides to write a retrospective on the Atherton Angels at the same time.
The dumbest of the Alex Cross series I’ve read, so far.
The novel has received a mostly negative response, and maintains a 2.5 rating (out of a possible five) on Amazon.com.[2] Several critics have attacked the story’s graphic scenes of violence and torture …
Seems Patterson REALLY wanted to draw attention to atrocities in Africa — so devised a plot to get Alex over there unofficially.