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Saving Faith

Saving Faith

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Author: David Baldacci
Publisher: Vision
Category: Book

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Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 181 reviews
Sales Rank: 11741

Media: Mass Market Paperback
Pages: 528
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 6.4 x 4.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0446608890
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780446608893
ASIN: 0446608890

Publication Date: September 1, 2000
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: GOOD with average wear to cover and pages. May contain minimal highlighting, inscriptions or notations. We ship quickly and work hard to earn your confidence. Orders are generally shipped no later than next business day. We offer a no hassle guarantee

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
It sounds like a movie pitch: "The story is like Tom Clancy crossed with John Grisham set in the Washington D.C. political world." But David Baldacci's Saving Faith successfully fuses elements from both of these chart-busters in this political thriller spiced with techno-wizardry.

The villain is a classic spy caricature: cold-war CIA super-patriot Robert Thornhill wants to reclaim the glory days of the Central Intelligence Agency--when money flowed like the Mississippi during a flood, and the FBI watched helplessly from the sidelines. Working from his secret underground bunker, he blackmails Danny Buchanan, one of the great Washington lobbyists, to front an enormous bribery scheme that will force Congress to bend to the CIA's whims. But Thornhill's plan springs a leak: Buchanan's assistant Faith Lockhart discovers her boss's dirty dealings, and she intends to expose the whole mess to Thornhill's nemesis, the FBI. Thornhill's associates attempt to assassinate Faith, but their bullet kills her FBI escort instead. Faith finds herself on the run with Lee Adams, a fit-and-trim PI who had been shadowing her at the behest of Buchanan.

If all this sounds a bit confusing, it is at times. Baldacci works hard to keep the tension steadily rising, but it is sometimes difficult to remember why Faith and Lee can't just stop running and go for help. Nevertheless, they are very likable heroes, and Baldacci's depiction of the world of lobbyists and the internecine warfare of the FBI and CIA (complete with state-of-the-art spy gadgets and transmission-proof chambers) elevates the novel with details that can come only from careful research. --Patrick O'Kelley

Product Description
It sounds like a movie pitch: "The story is like Tom Clancy crossed with John Grisham set in the Washington D.C. political world." But David Baldacci's Saving Faith successfully fuses elements from both of these chart-busters in this political thriller spiced with techno-wizardry.The villain is a classic spy caricature: cold-war CIA super-patriot Robert Thornhill wants to reclaim the glory days of the Central Intelligence Agency--when money flowed like the Mississippi during a flood, and the FBI watched helplessly from the sidelines. Working from his secret underground bunker, he blackmails Danny Buchanan, one of the great Washington lobbyists, to front an enormous bribery scheme that will force Congress to bend to the CIA's whims. But Thornhill's plan springs a leak: Buchanan's assistant Faith Lockhart discovers her boss's dirty dealings, and she intends to expose the whole mess to Thornhill's nemesis, the FBI. Thornhill's associates attempt to assassinate Faith, but their bullet kills her FBI escort instead. Faith finds herself on the run with Lee Adams, a fit-and-trim PI who had been shadowing her at the behest of Buchanan. If all this sounds a bit confusing, it is at times. Baldacci works hard to keep the tension steadily rising, but it is sometimes difficult to remember why Faith and Lee can't just stop running and go for help. Nevertheless, they are very likable heroes, and Baldacci's depiction of the world of lobbyists and the internecine warfare of the FBI and CIA (complete with state-of-the-art spy gadgets and transmission-proof chambers) elevates the novel with details that can come only from careful research. --Patrick O'Kelley


Customer Reviews:   Read 176 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Yes. A winner here.   December 8, 1999
27 out of 35 found this review helpful

Five stars. I think reviewing a novel is best achieved by comparing it to others most of us have read, so prospective readers have something to measure it against. Keeping Faith is a spellbinding novel of intrigue, it has the relentless pace and stunning power of The Triumph and the Glory, the plot twists of Grisham at his best, the vivid imagery of Cold Mountain, and the style and flavor of Tom Clancy's Executive Orders.


3 out of 5 stars A very uninteresting book   November 20, 1999
26 out of 34 found this review helpful

I am a great fan of David Baldacci but this book was a disappointment after The Winner and Simple Truth. This story rambled too much. Boring. Also, in this story he seems to relate to foul language in excess of his other books. Why do so many authors seem to feel they must include an abundance of four letter foul words? Please, David, go back to your old style.


2 out of 5 stars Not even close to his best work.   December 4, 1999
Marc Hall (San Diego)
21 out of 25 found this review helpful

This book was a huge disappointment when compared to Baldacci's previous works. Bland characters & constant pontificating about the big bad governmnent. I admire his attempt to raise awareness for the plight of LDC's, but how about writing a readable book & subsequently donating the proceeds. This book reminds me of Grisham's Street Lawyer, more opinion than story. You would be better off rereading Absolute Power or The Winner, then plow through this sub par work.


1 out of 5 stars Slow-paced and -witted   December 14, 1999
18 out of 24 found this review helpful

This latest from Baldacci is worse than ever: condescendingly torpid storytelling and set-up, a phony love story between two protagonists who resemble life sized Barbie and Ken dolls, and all the action practically spelled out for the reader in capital letters. It's just dumb, dumb, dumb --it would be nice if Baldacci let the reader think for him or herself for once. But he persists in cranking out this third-rate junk. It's a sad slide.


3 out of 5 stars Baldacci mailed in this one...   January 17, 2000
Aaron Steel (Toronto, Canada)
17 out of 20 found this review helpful

I was really looking forward to this book, butunfortunately Baldacci is continuing the downward trend started by his last effort. Basically, his first three books were great, his last was pretty good, however Saving Faith is simply mediocre. Number one, the plot is poor. It really doesn't make any sense and it is very thin. Two, the characters are very one-dimensional and dull, with the exception of Thornhill (he is simply assinine). I wouldn't have really cared if someone had of come in and killed a bunch of them off- it might have been welcomed, in fact. Number three, the book is way too long- take out all the filler and you could probably cut out minimum 50 pages. It seemed as though Baldacci did a lot of research that he felt was necessary to stick in even though it bogged down the plot and cut out any possible excitement or suspense. For example, almost every chapter with Buchanan is virtually pointless except to take up page after page with all of the information Baldacci researched about politics in Washington. And finally, there really were no major twists at all, or any suprises much either. Although it does get better towards the end.

Having said all of this, it still isn't really a BAD book, but I expected much more form Baldacci; there just isn't anything to set it apart from other, much better books. It is in a word, mediocre. If you haven't read Baldacci before you definitely should read one of his earlier books.



baldacci  david baldacci  good  political thriller  spy stories  

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