*Berry, Steve. The Columbus Affair. Ballantine. May 2012. c426p. ISBN 978-0-345-52651-9. $27. Fiction.

In his first stand-alone thriller since 2005, Berry (The Jefferson Key) takes advantage of the enigma that was Christopher Columbus to create a fascinating blend of legends, fables, contested historical facts, and imaginative fiction. Tom Sagan, a disgraced journalist of Jewish descent, is about to commit suicide when he is coerced into a plot to decipher secrets hidden in the coffin of his father. Sagan’s estranged daughter, Alle, has fallen into the hands of ruthless Zachariah Simon, a wealthy Orthodox Jew in search of a treasure supposedly hidden by Columbus somewhere in Jamaica. Simon has temporarily allied himself with Béne Rowe, a Jamaican Maroon, descendant of runaway slaves, who has his own reasons for finding the treasure. But does it exist and, if so, what exactly is it? Many will risk their lives to learn the truth. VERDICT Thriller readers–from fans of Dan Brown’s ciphers to Clive Cussler’s fantastic adventures–will savor this intoxicating amalgam of Taíno (indigenous) myth, Maroon legend, the history of Jews in Jamaica, the peregrinations of Temple treasures following Titus’s sacking of Jerusalem in 70 C.E., and Columbus’s mysterious deeds in the West Indies. Sure to be another bestseller.

Library Journal, 137, no. 8 (May 1, 2012), 68, 70.


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