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Day of Confession
Day of Confession
Author: Allan Folsom
When L.A. entertainment lawyer Harry Addison gets the call that his brother Danny has been killed in a bus explosion in Italy, he rushes to Rome to bring the body back home. But Harry is about to discover how difficult and dangerous that seemingly simple task will be.
ISBN: 64190
Edition: Abridged
Rating:
  • Currently 2.5/5 Stars.
 1

2.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Time Warner Audiobook
Book Type: Audio Cassette
Other Versions: Paperback, Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Day of Confession on + 533 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A world-famous assassin, a power-hungry villain, a beleaguered hero, a plot to take over the largest country on earth. Folsom's frantically paced follow-up to his bestselling The Day After Tomorrow throws together all the raw materials of a first-rate thriller and proves that ingredients alone do not a meal make. Four days after Cardinal Rosario Parma is assassinated in Rome, hotshot L.A. entertainment lawyer Harry Addison gets a frantic phone message from his estranged brother, Danny, a Vatican priest. Shortly thereafter, Harry hears that Danny has died in a bus explosion. When he flies to Rome to claim the body, he discovers that Danny is the prime suspect in Parma's murder?and that he's still alive. The novel then follows two parallel plots. Harry tries to find Danny and clear his name; meanwhile, the sinister Cardinal Umberto Palestrina, who thinks he's the reincarnation of Alexander the Great, plots to make China the site of a new Holy Roman Empire. It's that Alexander the Great touch that pushes an already teetering story line over the edge, where everything is explained by shorthand (the estrangement between the Addison brothers) or circular logic (Palestrina is feared and powerful because he inspires fear and wields power). There's a lot of action, mostly to hide the fact that the cardboard characters generate as little sympathy as the thousands of Chinese deaths that are Step One in Palestrina's master plan. Instead of being disturbing or controversial, Folsom's mix of religion and politics approaches comic-book parody.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY REVIEW
reviewed Day of Confession on + 5 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I really enjoyed this book. Although the premise is different (essentially it's a book about a plot to assasinate the Pope) from the DaVinci Code, I found some of the action to be similar. All in all, I couldn't put it down.
reviewed Day of Confession on + 76 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A fast moving thriller!
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reviewed Day of Confession on + 12 more book reviews
Good vatican thriller
reviewed Day of Confession on + 121 more book reviews
Enjoyed this book very much. Had not read this author before, will look for more of his work.
reviewed Day of Confession on + 3 more book reviews
kina like the bourne supremacy
reviewed Day of Confession on + 219 more book reviews
good read
reviewed Day of Confession on + 7 more book reviews
A world-famous assassin, a power-hungry villain, a beleaguered hero, a plot to take over the largest country on earth. Folsom's frantically paced follow-up to his bestselling The Day After Tomorrow throws together all the raw materials of a first-rate thriller and proves that ingredients alone do not a meal make. Four days after Cardinal Rosario Parma is assassinated in Rome, hotshot L.A. entertainment lawyer Harry Addison gets a frantic phone message from his estranged brother, Danny, a Vatican priest. Shortly thereafter, Harry hears that Danny has died in a bus explosion. When he flies to Rome to claim the body, he discovers that Danny is the prime suspect in Parma's murder?and that he's still alive. The novel then follows two parallel plots. Harry tries to find Danny and clear his name; meanwhile, the sinister Cardinal Umberto Palestrina, who thinks he's the reincarnation of Alexander the Great, plots to make China the site of a new Holy Roman Empire. It's that Alexander the Great touch that pushes an already teetering story line over the edge, where everything is explained by shorthand (the estrangement between the Addison brothers) or circular logic (Palestrina is feared and powerful because he inspires fear and wields power). There's a lot of action, mostly to hide the fact that the cardboard characters generate as little sympathy as the thousands of Chinese deaths that are Step One in Palestrina's master plan. Instead of being disturbing or controversial, Folsom's mix of religion and politics approaches comic-book parody.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY REVIEW
grannysmith avatar reviewed Day of Confession on + 6 more book reviews
Not "The DaVinci Code", but filled with Vatican intrique, this is an exciting audiobook with a surprising ending. Read by Joe Mantegna, it is unabridged on 4 cassettes.


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