The Blessed and the Damned (Righteous)
The Blessed and the Damned (Righteous) book cover

The Blessed and the Damned (Righteous)

Paperback – Unabridged, October 2, 2012

Price
$11.24
Format
Paperback
Pages
350
Publisher
Thomas & Mercer
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1612182216
Dimensions
5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
Weight
13.6 ounces

Description

From Booklist Wallace, who grew up in a small-town religious setting, takes readers to the fundamentalist Mormon community of Blister Creek, Utah, where Jacob Christianson, a physician, struggles to reconcile his deep faith with his concerns about his community’s fundamentalist practices. His father, Abraham, is the prophet of a polygamous sect. Abraham has exiled the Kimball family, sending its patriarch to prison. Now the Kimballs want revenge. Taylor Kimball is a brutal man bent on eliminating the Christiansons. As homes are destroyed and people die, Jacob and his family work with the FBI to find the Kimballs and end the violence. Readers will enjoy the stark western setting and the glimpse at life in a little-known community. They will also appreciate the strength of the women living in a patriarchal society. The strong characters and vivid atmosphere provide the appeal in this engrossing mystery. About the Author Michael Wallace was born in California and raised in a small religious community in Utah, eventually heading east to live in New England. An experienced world traveler, he has trekked through the Andes, ventured into the Sahara on a camel, and traveled through Thailand by elephant. In addition to working as a literary agent and innkeeper, he previously worked as a software engineer for a Department of Defense contractor, programming simulators for nuclear submarines. He is the author of more than a half-dozen novels, including The Righteous , Mighty and Strong , and The Wicked .

Features & Highlights

  • As the son of the prophet of Blister Creek, a polygamous enclave in Utah, Dr. Jacob Christianson has struggled for years to reconcile his faith with his skepticism about the fundamentalist practices of his community. Nevertheless, when his family and neighbors were threatened, Jacob stepped up time and again to lead the fight against those who would destroy them. Now Jacob and the residents of Blister Creek face a dangerous new challenge to their quiet existence. Taylor Kimball Jr. wants to take over as prophet of Blister Creek―and he wants Jacob’s sister Eliza by his side when he does it. With no room for personal reservations, Jacob forms a tenuous alliance with his father and the FBI. But Taylor Junior is as crafty as he is brutal, anticipating Jacob’s plan and drawing him out to leave Blister Creek vulnerable to attack. And this time Taylor has come prepared, with a horrific new weapon capable of annihilating Blister Creek. If he has any chance of winning this fight, Jacob will have to decide, once and for all, just how far he is willing to go to protect his community. The fourth in Michael Wallace’s riveting Righteous series,
  • The Blessed and the Damned
  • raises the stakes in Jacob’s world to dizzying new heights.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(118)
★★★★
25%
(98)
★★★
15%
(59)
★★
7%
(27)
23%
(90)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Disappointing

I've been a fan of this series from the beginning, and was eagerly looking forward to this fourth installment. Unfortunately, I found The Blessed and the Damned to be lacking in some of the very things that made me like the first three installments so much. It was nice to see Jacob and Eliza Christianson, however this time around I had real difficulty connecting with these characters. Gone were the compelling struggles with faith that made the prior installments so fascinating. At times I found their actions unrealistic and their motivations unclear.

The plot in this installment often felt contrived, and I found myself putting the book down for extended periods of time and being reluctant to pick it back up again. The author achieved genuinely suspenseful moments on only a couple of occasions, before the story would once again get mired down in a narrative that just didn't flow well. Taylor Junior returns in this installment and has a few really good villainous moments, but by the end I was just not buying it.

I will be back for the next installment of the series, and I hope the author is able to return to the level of compelling emotion and riveting suspense that characterized all the previous installments. This one was just disappointing.
9 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Excellent book - keeps you engaged
1 people found this helpful
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DISTURBING ON MANY LEVELS

I like learning about other religious cultures and I am tolerant of other people views but I do not like this book. When we start accepting other religions that are subversive and do not tolerate everyone's right to believe as they choose we have forgotten the principles on which our country was founded.
1 people found this helpful
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Mysteries and murders with a hint of religion

Religious convictions and beliefs injected a different aspect of suspense into mysteries and murders. With this book, the formulae worked, no matter what religious beliefs you have as a reader. Looking forward to the next one in the series.
1 people found this helpful
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Good Read

I had a hard time when I first began reading this series because I'm female and the Mormon fundamentalist culture just made me angry, but I stuck with it a little longer and became tempted to keep turning the page. I was surprised at how everything turned out and was happy to reach the end of the book with Jacob and Eliza unmarried, and then even more surprised to find Eliza not there in the next book (by that, I mean not living within the community any longer), but still strongly attached to Jacob and her family. I enjoyed the 4th book in the series, also, though the pattern of Taylor Kimball being the next bad guy may be a little too predictable. I will, however, continue to follow the series and will probably look into other books by the author. I am definitely hooked. Thank you
1 people found this helpful
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Interesting premise, a fun read

I hadn't read the first three books in the series when I picked this one up. I wasn't lost, although for readers of previous books, it might be nice to revisit familiar characters.
It was very interesting to read a novel centered around Mormon polygamist characters, which I haven't seen done in other books. The novel provided insight into life in a nontraditional community, which might interest some readers. Personally, I found it a little odd, but nonetheless interesting.
In one word: interesting. Four stars.
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Thriller series

The setting takes place in polygamist fundamentalist communities in the desert of Utah. This is the fourth in the series, while I have not read any previous in this series, I found this to be very disturbing especially taking into account religion. Blister Creek is the commune or community / fundamentalist communities of the polygamist Mormons portrayed in the Righteous series.

Having a hard time getting into this story, disturbing details, lack of any humility or humanity for the women. Not sure if reading the series in order from the beginning would help with my feelings about this story line or not. I have heard mixed reviews, some who love the series and those who are on the fence.
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Going back for #1

Very interesting on many levels! This is the first mystery suspense I have ever read with a Mormon setting. I have no basis for knowing how close to reality the book was in that particular area but it definitely was an interesting change of pace. Very vividly portrayed without being bogged down in tedious details. My only regret was starting with #4. I will definitely be going back for the first one and reading in order from there!
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Taylor Kimball Jr. is hell bent on revenge

In The Blessed and the Damned (Righteous Series #4) Taylor Kimball Jr. is hell bent on revenge. He wants to destroy Jacob Christianson and add Eliza to his harem.

I find the historical (and Reconstructionist history) of this fictional Mormon fundamentalist sect fascinating. The rolls of the woman are particularly noteworthy. The author, Michael Wallace, portrays them as both strong and intelligent but still subservient to the men they serve.

Dr. Jacob Christianson continues to be the reluctant leader of the Blister Creek enclave and this time the plans of Taylor Jr. are so diabolical they test how far Jacob is willing to push his faltering faith and responsibility to the community.

I like this series although the writing is so-so and the story line gets contrived it does not take itself too seriously. This is a good series to get into if you're looking for an out of the ordinary way to fill your idle time but don't want to devote too many brain cells to the endeavor.
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Awesome Book for Walking Dead Fans

Maybe Hunger Games fans too. Or any fans of post-apocalyptic fiction. I used to read more of that back in the day like the Wingman series by Mack Maloney, which was basically Mad Max with airplanes. Now that was sweet. Anyway, this is good too.