
Rating: ****
Étiquettes: Autotrad, Lang:en
Résumé:
Science and sci-fi go hand in hand in this ambitious, if
not entirely successful, thriller by Jensen (Millennium
Rising), which incorporates elements of Kabbalah (Jewish
mysticism) as well as theoretical physics. During WWII,
physicist and mystic Rabbi Yosef Kobinski vanished from
Auschwitz in a blinding flash of light. Kobinski left behind
at the camp his Kabbalist masterpiece, The Book of Torment,
to be buried for safekeeping. Half a century later, a
Jerusalem rabbi and an American journalist are trying to find
it. Kobinski had also discovered a mathematical theorem that
accounts for good and evil in the universe. The theorem is
astonishingly similar to work that Dr. Jill Talcott and her
assistant Nate Andros have been doing at the University of
Washington, studying the effects of energy waves on living
creatures. Talcott and Andros are not yet aware of the full
destructive potential of their experiments, but the
government is, and its agents are soon on Talcott's trail as
she takes up the search for Kobinski's manuscript. The
principals ultimately find themselves gathered at the very
site near Auschwitz where Kobinski disappeared, and they too
are in for an otherworldly odyssey. Jensen is on surer ground
describing Kabbalah and Holocaust history than she is
plotting supernatural adventures, which unravel by the end.
But she gets points for the innovative, multifaceted story.
Adult/High School-Denton Wylie, a rich and charming
tabloid writer, is researching an article about unexplained
disappearances. Rabbi Aharon Handalman studies Kabbalah in
Jerusalem and searches obsessively for "divinely implanted"
coded messages in the Torah. Big, bad Calder Farris is a
Marine Intelligence operative on the trail of cutting-edge
scientific research that can yield new weapons technology.
The ambitious young physicist Jill Talcott is secretly
testing a revolutionary new theory in wave mechanics. The
paths of these people converge in a search for missing pieces
of a lost manuscript written at Auschwitz by a Polish rabbi,
physicist, and mystic who vanished in front of witnesses 50
years ago. Modern physics and Kabbalah merge in Kobinski's
manuscript, and as the four main characters pursue different
aspects of the knowledge it contains, their quest delivers
them deep into their own private hells. Although this
genre-defying tale takes on weighty issues, Jensen's
impressive mastery of fictional technique-plotting, humor,
sympathetic characters, a great McGuffin, and lots of
suspense-makes it feel like much lighter fare. The middle
section is a bit hard to get through, but by then most
readers will be hooked enough to stick around for the fitting
denouement. This interesting story has obvious appeal for SF
and suspense fans, but it is also an enjoyable exercise in
the arcane for readers intrigued by codes, psychology, and
mysticism.
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.From School Library Journal
Christine C. Menefee, Fairfax County Public Library,
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division
of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.