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The Judas Saints

The Judas Saints by Keith M. Spence is a political thriller that drops you into a web of staged suicides, buried evidence, and power plays that run from a small town all the way into the White House. We follow two main investigators: FBI Agent Michael Saville, who refuses to accept that an investigative journalist’s “suicide” is what it appears to be, and Park Police Sergeant Lowri Pritchard, who is asking the same hard questions about a dead deputy White House counsel in D.C. Their separate cases start to overlap, and what begins as a couple of suspicious deaths slowly unfolds into a coordinated campaign of silencing, corruption, and cover ups inside the American political machine. The book bills itself as “A Novel of Political Intrigue,” and that is exactly what it is: a conspiracy story with law enforcement at the center, written to make you wonder how far people in power will go to protect themselves.

It’s a nuts-and-bolts kind of thriller in the best sense. Spence spends time on the mechanics of investigation, the turf battles, the interviews that do not quite add up, and the way one small inconsistency can keep nagging at a cop or an agent who cannot let it go. The alternating focus between Saville and Pritchard gives the story a nice rhythm: one chapter feels grounded and local, the next widens the lens to D.C. and the political theater there, and together they keep pulling the plot tighter. I liked that the book does not rely only on big shootouts or chases to keep tension high. Sometimes it is a line in a report, a supposedly routine autopsy, or a carefully worded brush-off from a superior that makes your stomach dip. The prose itself is straightforward rather than flashy, which suits a political thriller that leans on procedure and puzzle-solving. Every so often, though, Spence drops in an image or a small sensory detail that reminds you there are real bodies, real grief, and real fear underneath all the paper and politics, and those moments hit harder because they are not overused.

What I enjoyed most were the choices he makes around villains and institutions. There is no single cackling mastermind twirling in the dark. Instead, the conspiracy is a network of people who are very plausible: a small town sheriff with his own priorities, a government insider who has decided that certain lives are collateral, an intelligence operative whose loyalty sits in a gray area, and a hit man type whose scenes carry a nasty edge. The book pokes at a pretty bleak idea, that some of the most dangerous threats to a democracy come from people who wrap themselves in the language of patriotism while quietly selling out the principles they claim to defend. That is not a subtle point, but in a political thriller subtle is not always the goal. I found myself both entertained and a little uneasy, thinking about how easy it is to hide behind process, jargon, or “national security” when bodies are on the ground. At the same time, the story still believes in individuals who do the right thing even when their own careers, and sometimes their lives, are on the line. That balance keeps the book from feeling completely cynical.

By the time I turned the last page, I felt like I had spent time in a world that was grim but believable, with investigators who are stubborn, flawed, and relatable. The Judas Saints leans into the strengths of the genre: intricate plotting, a growing sense of danger, and the satisfaction of watching people chip away at a lie that powerful folks desperately want to keep intact. I would happily recommend it to readers who enjoy conspiracy-driven crime fiction, fans of procedurals who like their cases tangled up with national politics, and anyone who wants a story that feels grounded in real-world corruption without drifting into lecture mode. If you like your thrillers more about legwork and moral choices than about gadgets and glamor, you’ll enjoy this story.

Pages: 306 | ASIN : B0GC7RKW5M

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Vatican Protocol

The Vatican Protocol

A mystery novel that tackles uncomfortable issues with a splash of adventure is what readers will find within the pages of The Vatican Protocol by Brian Gallagher. This book contains all the basics of a mystery: intrigue, conspiracies, subterfuge and best of all, aliens. Whether or not the aliens are real and what relationship they have to the story that is told is up to the readers to discover. It’s a grand journey that crosses over the Atlantic Ocean to Europe in search of answers. Almost Indiana-Jones-esque, this adventure will surely have readers turning those pages to discover just what the relationship is between these aliens and the ever esteemed Vatican church. The answer might just surprise all who pick this up.

We follow our protagonist, Sean O’Sea, as he begins his journey from his comfortable home to Europe where his life is placed in jeopardy several times. It’s not a good action story without some sort of armed confrontation. Sean seems like a regular man with very irregular friends as he pursues his latest obsession with alien theories and whether or not there is any truth to the stories that have been told. He’s a likeable character and his ‘everyman’ flavouring will allow all readers to feel a bit of them in him. This allows readers to connect with the story on a more personal level and demonstrates the clever wordsmithing at play. The cast of characters is easy to keep track of even if it may seem like there are a few more than necessary.

The small downfalls of this book is the dialogue and how convenient everything seems. There are points in the novel when characters are conversing between themselves and their words seem stilted and forced. As if they are speaking just for the sake of speaking. This detracts slightly from the overall tone of the novel, but it is easy to move past.

As for the convenience of everything, this could just be a story element to help solidify the conspiracy flavour of the book as a whole, but it seems contrived in some areas. Our protagonist just happens to have a summer home that is looked after by a man who just happens to have worked with the CIA on top secret missions. Our protagonist also just happens to make friends with some very influential people during his travels and just happens to uncover a massive plot while being an ordinary man. Perhaps this is what makes a great conspiracy tale, however it felt a little too easy. But these are minor and don’t take away from the joy of reading.

For readers who enjoy reading conspiracy theories that involve the church and global cover-ups, you will definitely find an enjoyable read in The Vatican Protocol by Brian Gallagher. This action story knee-deep in such a controversial subject is entertaining to read and the twist at the end will have all readers questioning exactly what transpired in the pages of the book.

Pages: 286 | ASIN: B01G0Y8ZFG

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