The Day of Atonement by David Liss Review
"Take a Peek" book reviews are short and (possibly) sweet, keeping the commentary cursory and providing a little peek at what the volume's about and what I thought.
Synopsis:
(via Goodreads)
SebastiĆ£o Raposa is only xiii when his parents are unjustly imprisoned, never to be seen again, and he is forced to abscond Portugal lest he as well fall victim to the Inquisition. Merely ten years in exile only serve to whet his appetite for vengeance. Returning at final to Lisbon, in the guise of English businessman Sebastian Foxx, he is no longer a frightened boy just a unsafe man tormented past fierce impulses. Haunted by the specter of all he has lost—including his exquisite first dearest—Foxx is adamant to right old wrongs by punishing an unforgivable enemy with unrelenting fury.
Well schooled by his benefactor, the notorious bounty hunter Benjamin Weaver, in the use of wits, fists, and a variety of weapons, Foxx stalks the ruthless Inquisitor priest Pedro Azinheiro. But in a metropolis ruled by terror and treachery, where coin and information tin buy power and trump any law, no enemy should be underestimated and no ally can be trusted. Having risked everything, and in one case over again under the watchful eye of the Inquisition, Foxx finds his plans unraveling as he becomes drawn into the struggles of old friends—and new enemies—none of whom, like Lisbon itself, are what they seem.
Compelled to play a game of deception and greed, Sebastian Foxx volition notice himself befriended, betrayed, tempted past desire, and tormented by personal turmoil. And when a twist of fate turns his carefully laid plans to chaos, he volition be forced to cull betwixt surrendering to bloodlust or serving the cause of mercy.
My Thoughts:
What a captivating volume! The narrator is a fascinating man, whose description of himself is not particularly trustworthy. Sebastian describes himself early on as a monster, someone whose sole purpose in life is vengeance. All the same equally we follow his intrigues and alliances while he moves his chess pieces into place, we come up to see him as well as a man with a moral cadre. He is a ruthless fighter who does not hesitate when violence is called for, yet his time in Lisbon becomes more and more complicated due to his sense of personal obligation to those he becomes entangled with. He defends those who demand information technology; he strives to right old wrongs; he grants forgiveness to people who cause him pain because he realizes they had only poor choices to make. Yes, he's still violent, but his rage is directed against the truthful villains, and the more than people he embroils in his plots, the more people he ends up trying to rescue.
I was very interested in the historical setting, having previously not read much virtually Portugal during this time period. The Inquisition and its cruelty and corruption is awful to read about, and the author does a masterful chore of making the dread and menace feel real. I was also fascinated to read about the massive convulsion that leveled Lisbon in 1755, which is used to great effect as part of the dramatic escape efforts of the main group of characters.
I'm grateful to my online volume group for selecting The Twenty-four hours of Atonement as a volume-of-the-month discussion book. I might not have come across it otherwise, merely I'm very glad that I did. This is David Liss's 8th novel, and I look forward to reading more of his work.
PS – I discovered after the fact that supporting character Benjamin Weaver is in fact the main graphic symbol in three previous novels past this author. I'll have to check them out!
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The details:
Title: The Day of Atonement
Author: David Liss
Publisher: Random House
Publication appointment: September 23, 2014
Length: 384 pages
Genre: Historical fiction
Source: Library
Source: https://bookshelffantasies.com/2015/05/29/take-a-peek-book-review-the-day-of-atonement/
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