2007; 505 pages. Book 2 (out of 4) in the “Wyman Ford”
Series. New Author? : No. Genres : Thriller; Action-Intrigue. Overall Rating : 8*/10.
It cost forty billion dollars, but the United
States government has built a world-class particle accelerator. They’ve named it “Isabella”. It’s out on a Navajo reservation in Arizona
and will out-perform the one called CERN, presently in operation in Switzerland.
Curiously, a lot of people are
upset about this. The President
is ticked off because it’s election year and a lot of voters think it’s a waste
of money because thus far, Isabella isn’t even
up and running.
The Navajos on the
reservation are mad because they were promised lots of jobs and lots of
scientists spending lots of money there to but food, gasoline, and other
necessities. None of that has happened.
The scientists at
Isabella are frazzled because they’re working long hours trying to debug the
process, and don’t have a clue as to what the glitches are.
A televangelist claims
the whole project is demonic, since particle physics and the Big Bang Theory runs contrary to God’s
Word in the Holy Bible.
And a fundamentalist
preacher has been personally told by God to gather up an army of believers
and destroy Isabella because doing so will usher in the End of Days.
Well, it’s true that Isabella
is way behind on getting up and running.
Something’s going wrong out there, the scientists are keeping it secret,
and the President wants to know what it is.
Hey, let’s send a federal agent out there, undercover, to nose around
and find out what the problem is!
What’s To Like...
Douglas Preston is half of the “Preston &
Child” writing team that authors the 22-book Agent
Pendergast series. Blasphemy is from one of Preston’s solo series,
featuring Wyman Ford, a widowed, ex-monk anthropologist who’s still trying to
come to grips with the death of his wife.
The storyline is first and
foremost a Thriller, but it also takes an in-depth look at how God might talk
to people of various religious/philosophical beliefs. The evangelicals, fundamentalists, and Native
American theologies are cited above; and the ex-monk Wyman can put forth the
Roman Catholic viewpoint. Most of the
rest of the scientists at Isabella are agnostics, the notable exception being
their charismatic team leader, Gregory Hazelius, who’s an atheist.
The bulk of the story takes
place on the reservation, and I liked the way the author portrays the Navajo
nation. A couple of Navajo phrases are
also worked into the text, including chindii,
Bilagaana, Diné, and my personal favorite, Ya’at’ eeh’ which I became familiar with many years ago in college.
I chuckled at the thought that God has chosen my home state, Arizona, as the starting point for
both Armageddon and the Apocalypse. Balanced
against those doomsday events is the scientific possibility that Isabella
will accidentally create black holes, which will immediately start disintegrating Earth, starting with,
yep you guessed it, Arizona.
Everything builds to a big climax featuring clashing factions, the resolution of which is suitably exciting, twisty,
and open-ended. At the end of the day, any or all of
the disparate groups could claim to be right and everybody else is wrong. Yet something has changed. Read the book to find out what.
Ratings…
Amazon: 4.2*/5, based on 2,354 ratings
and 402 reviews.
Goodreads: 3.73*/5,
based on 11,228
ratings and 866 reviews.
Excerpts...
“What kind of research are you doing over there? I been hearing weird stories.”
“Investigating the Big Bang.”
“What’s that?”
“That’s the theory that the universe came
into existence thirteen billion years ago in an explosion and has been
expanding outward ever since.”
“In other words, you people are shoving
your noses into the Creator’s business.”
“The Creator didn’t give us brains for
nothing.” (pg. 92)
“Everyone will be underground. When you and your riders arrive, I’ll be the
only one there to meet you.”
“We aren’t doing a meet and greet.”
“I didn’t want you to think we were being
disrespectful.”
Begay patted his horse and stroked his
flank. “Look, Mr. Ford, we got our own
plans. We’re going to set up a sweat
lodge, do some ceremonies, talk to the ground.
We’ll be peaceful. When the
police come to arrest us, we’ll go quietly.”
“The police aren’t going to come,” said
Ford.
Begay looked disappointed. “No police?”
“Should we call them?” Ford asked quietly. (pg. 253)
“He can’t help
it. His doctorate was in horse’s-assery.” (pg. 74)
The profanity level is
moderate.
There are 16 cusswords in the first 10% of the book, but most of them
are eschatological ones. Later on, a racial slur is used, and there was one adult situation.
In the back of my book, there's a “Note on the Paperback Edition”
wherein Douglas Preston recounts the righteous indignation that came out after
this book was first released in hardback format.
It is short and well worth taking the time to read.
I have high expectations for
any novel by Preston & Child, both as a team or writing solo, and Blasphemy did not disappoint. Yes, I was trying to deduce which band of
religious zealots would be revealed to be the “chosen ones”, but after
reading the blowback alluded to in the previous paragraph, I think Douglas
Preston opted for the best way to wrap things up.
8 Stars. One last thing. At one point, one of the characters decides to prove he’s right by citing a single cryptic name: “Joe Blitz”. The group of scientists reading this is stymied, and so was I. Have fun trying to figure it out.