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The Left Hand of God

Written by Paul Hoffman

Average Score: 55(7)

Paul Hoffman's novel of astonishing scope and imagination, featuring a darkly gifted teenage boy at the center of a brutal holy war, grabs the reader from its incredible opening lines and refuses to let go. The Left Hand of God is the first novel in an epic, ambitious trilogy that will prove irresistible to the readers who have turned the Inheritance Cycle, Twilight, and the His Dark Materials series into publishing phenomena.

The Left Hand of God is the story of sixteen-year-old Thomas Cale, who has grown up imprisoned at the Sanctuary of the Redeemers, a fortress run by a secretive sect of warrior monks in a distant, dystopian past. He is one of thousands of boys who train all day in hand-to-hand combat, in preparation for a holy war that only the High Priests know is now imminent. He has no reason to think he's special, no idea there's another world outside the compound's walls, and no hope for a life any different from the one he already knows.

And then, Cale opens a door.

What follows is a daring escape, an unlikely alliance, a desperate pursuit, a journey of incredible discovery, and an adventure the likes of which Cale could never possibly have imagined, culminating in Cale's astonishing realization that he alone has the power to save his world- or to destroy it.

Book Details

Fantasy
Hardcover, 384 Pages
Published by Dutton Adult on June 15, 2010
First Published by Michael Joseph in 2010
ISBN-10 0525951318
ISBN-13 978-0525951315

Reviews


Fantasy Book Critic | Liviu Suciu
Review Rating: 100
Highly, highly recommended and my first A++ novel of 2010.
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Fantasy Book Critic | Robert Thompson
Review Rating: 60
Paul Hoffman's "The Left Hand of God" is a novel that both frustrates and entertains...
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Fantasy Literature | Bill Capossere
Review Rating: 60
I can't say I was driven to read to the end, but I was a bit curious as to what would happen to Cale, enough not to put the book down.
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sffworld.com | Mark Yon
Review Rating: 60
...an overall feeling of a tale told before, admittedly told well, though in the end rather empty.
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SFRevu | John Berlyne
Review Rating: 50
There's a lot that doesn't work for me The Left Hand of God, but for all that, I still read through to the very end and that in itself is interesting.
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The Wertzone | Adam Whitehead
Review Rating: 40
The Left Hand of God is a work of impressive drabness and unoriginality.
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SF Site | John Enzinas
Review Rating: 20
The characters are flat and defined mostly by being good at things. The plot is haphazard, slow and driven by inconsistent reactions.
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