A clandestine alliance, dedicated to preserving Christianity from communism and fascism, undertakes a dangerous covert mission in Stalin’s Russia in Keating’s historical thriller.
In 1928, shortly before Moscow’s St. Michael’s Lutheran Church is to be demolished by Soviet authorities, Pastor Gabriel Fischer finds a remarkable religious relic: the first translation of the Bible into Russian, accomplished by theologian Johann Ernst Glück. He quickly transports the work to the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, where it is to be hidden, and then he’s summarily executed in a planned hitalong with his friend Eckhart Konig. Meanwhile, a priest and a Lutheran pastor—Patrick O’Riley and Eric Meyer—intervene heroically during an assassination attempt on another man of the cloth, John Rose, during a symposium at Georgetown University. The assassins turn out to be agents sent by Stalin. O’Riley and Meyer’s exploits impress the Alliance of Saint Michael, a secretive organization, both for their quick action in the face of danger and for their profound appreciation of the threat communism and fascism pose to Christian civilization. The pair accept an invitation to join the group and are tasked with recovering Glück’s Bible before the cathedral is destroyed. Keating’s book is vigorously paced overall; there’s no deficit of action or intrigue in these pages. However, the book as a whole feels rather stale, and readers likely won’t be able to escape the sense that they have read a book very much like this one before. The secret society at the heart of the novel, in particular, is formulaic stuff that readers of the cloak-and-dagger genre will certainly be familiar with. Moreover, the prose is similarly unspectacular—clumsy and earnest, with a tendency toward melodrama: “The communists had made clear that religion and the Church were enemies of the State, and destined for annihilation.”
A fast-paced espionage thriller that’s undermined by a lack of freshness.