Saturday, 8 February 2014

The Beating of his Wings - relentless and shocking

Oh my, oh my! It's not often that a book actually surprises me to such an extent that I gasp out loud, but The Beating of his Wings, by Paul Hoffman made me do this, not once, not twice, but THREE times. This is the final book in the Left Hand of God trilogy, the story of Thomas Cale, a troubled boy brought up by religious fanatics (the Redeemers) who train and prepare him to become the Angel of Death, on earth to dish out God's wrath on humanity. They think he will bring about the end of the world so that it can start afresh. However, Thomas is not a boy who readily submits to his apparent destiny. This final book opens with Thomas barely able to function and in a medical facility. He has long therapy sessions with one of the nuns and a wool doll who makes snide comments (yeah, I know, this was never really fully explained), who tried to get Thomas to face up to himself. When two assassins spring an ambush, he miraculously escapes and leaves his place of safety and he is pulled back into the centre of things. Very few people actually like him and almost exclusively resent his presence, but also know that without him, their chances of defeating The Redeemers - who are on the move to put their plan of total destruction into place - are zero. When the elite army suffer a heavy defeat, Thomas, with his two childhood friends - Vague Henri and Cleist - starts to put together an army of farmers and labourers. Training and tactics are the watchwords, and inevitably, the battles commence. There are some REAL shocks in this epic tale. There are definitely more grim moments than light, and whilst the central character is exceptionally hard to like, somehow, you cannot help but root for him. This book has had some terrible reviews on Amazon. Maybe I am unusual in really enjoying this one - or maybe it was because I was reading the audio version, narrated by the genius who is Sean Barrett who brings so much to anything he narrates. Whatever, I personally thought this was a fitting end to this series.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 512 print pages.
Price I paid: £7.99.
Formats available: Print; unabridged audio download; ebook.

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