Home :: Books :: Science Fiction & Fantasy  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy

Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
The Word

The Word

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Jaded "Flack" Turns Biblical Detective
Review: "The Word" is a labyrinthine rollercoaster of a book, twisting and turning with each crumb of evidence and each new locale - catacombs, Amsterdam, even Devil's Island. Is a newly-unearthed document from The Holy Land authentic or a forgery? To what degree will Men of Faith rest their reputations on this find? To what ends can it be put?

Author Irving Wallace does a remarkable job describing a jaded PR man's reaction to what seems an endless torrent of developments until the denouement, delivered via a medium the protagonist is sure to understand ... or does he?

A gripping, thought-provoking "must read".

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: I was surprised...by its length
Review: Don't get me wrong...when a book is really good, I want it to last forever. When a book is predictable, and tame, then I am usually tapping my fingers, waiting to see the spectacular ending. In this case, the ending almost made me wince. Suffice it to say that I thought there would be more conspiracy involved in the ending, and I expected that the story would have more plot twists and turns.

In reality, this book should never be compared to The Da Vinci Code. Having read that novel several times, I am always reminded of the twists and turns that kept me interested. This book was tame, and its rerelease upon the wave of interest in this subject started by Brown was irritating especially due to the rather tepid nature of this book.

If you want more of The Da Vinci Code, read Angels and Demons. If you still don't have enough, read The Da Vinci Legacy. If you are obsessive or a completist of the genre, go ahead and read this 600-page lukewarm text. But, don't say I didn't warn you. I am going to go cleanse myself now...

Harkius

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Yeah, Right...
Review: I could not wait to finish this book...so I could start reading a realistic one. The idea sounded great, the writing was a huge disappointment. Even taken into consideration it is over 30 ears old, it is so farfetched and the main character is one of the dumbest "heros" I've seen. The ending, when I finally got to it, was disappointing....I expected more from the author of the 7th Secret.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Word: A Retreat From Faith
Review: The test of a believer's faith is to continue to believe even when experience and science tell him not to. In THE WORD by Irving Wallace, the hero Steve Randall, is initially a man of no faith in the Word of God. He is not unhappy with that nor does he feel any the less a man for that. During the course of the novel, he regains his Faith, only to lose it again by the book's end. The reader is much like Mr. Randall.
Steve Randall works for a book company, and it is his job to publicize a new version of the Bible purportedly based on the unexpected find of the Lost Scriptures of James the Just, the brother of Jesus. This lost gospel proves beyond doubt that Jesus lived, He walked, He had His ministry, and He was crucified. As Randal reads an advanced copy of this gospel, he rebuilds his lost faith and becomes a true believer in the Word. Now afire with holy zeal, he prepares to publicize and publish this new Bible in the hopes of regalvanizing the billions of Christians world wide. Unfortunately, for his new-found sense of holy mission, he is given incontrovertible evidence that the new gospel is a magnificent fraud, perpetrated by a master hoaxer who has a decades-old feud against the Catholic church. When he attempts to bring this evidence to the attention of his superiors, they stonewall him by assuring him that the proof is itself a hoax, and that the new Bible is the real McCoy. When Randall ignores warnings to lay off, he encounters men trying to kill him and to bury the evidence of this forgery for all eternity. By the book's end, he fails, and the new Bible is published amidst waves of hosannas.
Part of the charm of THE WORD lies in Wallace's interweaving a tightly knit plot with flashing-eyes-and-heaving-bosom sex scenes coupled with a surprisingly fascinating series of erudite digressions of Biblical history, mythology, and publishing. I learned a great deal about the historical life and times of Jesus Christ, even if some of this 'knowledge' was itself part of the fraud. Much of the plot revolved around nothing more than a bunch of learned Biblical scholars arguing the merits of theology and faith. By the time I got to the end, I became convinced that the majority of human beings fell into one of two categories: those who are gullible enough to accept the most wicked fraud in history as genuine and those who help to perpetuate that fraud. Perhaps Wallace gives the reader a hint of this two-level division of faith in his introductory series of three quotes which preceed the novel, the last of which reads: 'If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him.'

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Word: A Retreat From Faith
Review: The test of a believer's faith is to continue to believe even when experience and science tell him not to. In THE WORD by Irving Wallace, the hero Steve Randall, is initially a man of no faith in the Word of God. He is not unhappy with that nor does he feel any the less a man for that. During the course of the novel, he regains his Faith, only to lose it again by the book's end. The reader is much like Mr. Randall.
Steve Randall works for a book company, and it is his job to publicize a new version of the Bible purportedly based on the unexpected find of the Lost Scriptures of James the Just, the brother of Jesus. This lost gospel proves beyond doubt that Jesus lived, He walked, He had His ministry, and He was crucified. As Randal reads an advanced copy of this gospel, he rebuilds his lost faith and becomes a true believer in the Word. Now afire with holy zeal, he prepares to publicize and publish this new Bible in the hopes of regalvanizing the billions of Christians world wide. Unfortunately, for his new-found sense of holy mission, he is given incontrovertible evidence that the new gospel is a magnificent fraud, perpetrated by a master hoaxer who has a decades-old feud against the Catholic church. When he attempts to bring this evidence to the attention of his superiors, they stonewall him by assuring him that the proof is itself a hoax, and that the new Bible is the real McCoy. When Randall ignores warnings to lay off, he encounters men trying to kill him and to bury the evidence of this forgery for all eternity. By the book's end, he fails, and the new Bible is published amidst waves of hosannas.
Part of the charm of THE WORD lies in Wallace's interweaving a tightly knit plot with flashing-eyes-and-heaving-bosom sex scenes coupled with a surprisingly fascinating series of erudite digressions of Biblical history, mythology, and publishing. I learned a great deal about the historical life and times of Jesus Christ, even if some of this 'knowledge' was itself part of the fraud. Much of the plot revolved around nothing more than a bunch of learned Biblical scholars arguing the merits of theology and faith. By the time I got to the end, I became convinced that the majority of human beings fell into one of two categories: those who are gullible enough to accept the most wicked fraud in history as genuine and those who help to perpetuate that fraud. Perhaps Wallace gives the reader a hint of this two-level division of faith in his introductory series of three quotes which preceed the novel, the last of which reads: 'If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent Him.'

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Is there any truth?
Review: This is a long and engaging novel which I have just reread after twenty years or more. It does show its age somewhat and yet it still contains some excellent research on Biblical documents and what we really have from close to the time of Christ. There is some good research on Roman times too. Strangely there was less on the apocryphal books of the Bible than I expected - I was certainly stimulated into reading some of these extraordinary documents by my first reading of 'The Word'.

However, I found the investigative role of the PR man from within the publishing group of the new New Testament - Resurrection Two - stretched my credulity far too far for my liking. And what a man this investigator is! Not only does he squeeze past some moments of impasse with the most amazing luck (more incredulity - but it does make a good yarn) but he has an unbelievable way with the ladies. This is what I disliked about the novel most - that and the characters left hanging (what did happen to the woman whose leg was miraculously cured? - ah, but there's the rub - there is no truth that can tell us). Most of all I could have done without the sexual olympics (scattered not too liberally it has to be said) through the novel - they might be titillating for the reader but I couldn't see how they had any meaning for the characters.

In the end Mr Wallace's own belief or lack of belief jumps up and hits us in the face. Our investigator-hero solves his case but gets no satisfaction of his objectives. The world goes on not the way he wanted, but does it matter? Yes, he goes on too and there's good in that as well. But is there any truth? Is the Bible we know and trust something we should believe in? Does it matter if it is true or not if it produces positive outcomes? But, now I see that I don't have the truth about Mr Wallace's intentions either. All I know is that I enjoyed his book despite it shortcomings.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Is there any truth?
Review: This is a long and engaging novel which I have just reread after twenty years or more. It does show its age somewhat and yet it still contains some excellent research on Biblical documents and what we really have from close to the time of Christ. There is some good research on Roman times too. Strangely there was less on the apocryphal books of the Bible than I expected - I was certainly stimulated into reading some of these extraordinary documents by my first reading of 'The Word'.

However, I found the investigative role of the PR man from within the publishing group of the new New Testament - Resurrection Two - stretched my credulity far too far for my liking. And what a man this investigator is! Not only does he squeeze past some moments of impasse with the most amazing luck (more incredulity - but it does make a good yarn) but he has an unbelievable way with the ladies. This is what I disliked about the novel most - that and the characters left hanging (what did happen to the woman whose leg was miraculously cured? - ah, but there's the rub - there is no truth that can tell us). Most of all I could have done without the sexual olympics (scattered not too liberally it has to be said) through the novel - they might be titillating for the reader but I couldn't see how they had any meaning for the characters.

In the end Mr Wallace's own belief or lack of belief jumps up and hits us in the face. Our investigator-hero solves his case but gets no satisfaction of his objectives. The world goes on not the way he wanted, but does it matter? Yes, he goes on too and there's good in that as well. But is there any truth? Is the Bible we know and trust something we should believe in? Does it matter if it is true or not if it produces positive outcomes? But, now I see that I don't have the truth about Mr Wallace's intentions either. All I know is that I enjoyed his book despite it shortcomings.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A test Of Faith
Review: With The Word, Irving Wallace silently invades the very core of our most revered belief in the Bible. If you are availed with an extensive knowledge of the history of the bible, the controversies sorrounding it's origin and contents, this cautionary tale of a "mad genius" who stumbles on lost scrolls believed to have been written by the brother of Jesus the christ, will challenge what you have come to know, and force you to question it's validity. The possibility of such an event existing in time becomes so real, you want to put the book down for fear of being charged with sacriledge. An entertaining and thought provoking piece of fiction.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates