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The Assignment
 
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The Assignment [Paperback]

Mark Andrew Olsen
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

Troubles plague this jumbled suspense novel for the CBA market by Olsen, a screenwriter who collaborated with Tommy Tenney on the novel Hadassah. Deep below the ground, sealed alive in a tomb for 60 years, is a "man" who is 1,734 years old and whose mission is to battle demonic forces on behalf of the Christian faith. Searching for him is Father Thierry, a 95-year-old priest who is part of the Order of St. Lazare, a secret sect that the Vatican has tried to disband. "The destroyer," Satan's evil spirit of destruction, war and bloodshed, is at work to prevent them from reaching their goal. He's already wreaked havoc over the course of history, as detailed in the novel in a tiresome litany of human atrocities. Complicating things is tension between Jews and Catholics over the priest's perceived desecration of a Holocaust site. Olsen peppers his tale with bang-bang action, supernatural warfare and Christian history, but too many points of view confuse the reader and make the pacing fitful. There's no shortage of kidnappings, quicksand, gunfights, secret membership amulets, harrowing escapes, rape, murder and terrorists as the plot unfolds. Numerous italicized journal entries, letters and flashbacks make for challenging reading. There's also an obvious nod to the The Da Vinci Code in the idea of a secret Catholic sect. Olsen writes some good scenes and knows how to raise the occasional goose bump, but readers will have trouble sticking with his story.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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With the action and suspense of a Ted Dekker novel and the spiritual warfare of This Present Darkness, Olsen's first solo novel poses an intriguing question. What if the Restrainer of II Thessalonians, the Holy Spirit who "holds back the lawless man until God takes him away," indwells a man who has lived under various identities since the time of Christ, always moving on when his "agelessness" is discovered? An immortal man, but still just a man, flawed and discouraged over his inability to better succeed at his immense mission: to restrain evil in the world. And what if at a time when the world hangs on the precipice of a third world war, this man were given one final opportunity to do battle with the Evil One?

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5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars 4 1/2 Stars...A Real Accomplishment, July 16 2004
By 
Eric Wilson "novelist" (Nashville, TN United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Assignment (Paperback)
The idea has intrigued mankind since the dawn of time: What would it be like to be immortal? What if you could not be killed? What if death had no hold on you?

Mark Andrew Olsen approaches this idea in a fresh way, and, in the process, gives us a suspenseful story with theological implications. The book opens with a group of old priests, a secretive Catholic order, who have been digging ceaselessly in their search for their immortal ward. The man they seek is one who has walked the earth for two millenia, living countless lives, and working as the one of who will restrain the spirit of the anti-Christ in godless times.

The story breaks open when this man is found, at last--buried alive in a Nazi tomb near Auchwitz. The havoc that ensues could've turned Hollywood-ish. At times, it does rely on gunfights and nick-of-time escapes. But the real accomplishment here, the beating heart of the story, is Olsen's ability to take us into the mind of his immortal character. We care about this man. We believe in his struggle. We feel at times that his struggle is the same one we face, daily trying to follow God despite our sense of hopelessness and uselessness in this fallen world.

Publishers Weekly accused the book of tiresome and confusing viewpoints, but I found the plot easy to follow. Even more importantly, I thought the characters were easy to sympathize with. Although the ingredients of the story seemed to promise more suspense in the finale, "The Assignment" is worth the effort. Without being preachy, Olsen reminds us that life is worth living--and that dying is nothing to fear when we are part of God's family.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Powerfully exciting, July 12 2004
By 
Harriet Klausner - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Assignment (Paperback)
He experienced the beauty of Heaven only to be brought back to life by Jesus to act as the Catacon, "the restrainer of destruction" who will be taken away just before the end of time". His primary role is to send the destroyer back to hell but every time he comes close, his enemy's minions bury him for decades at a time.

The priests of the Order of St. Lazare spend decades trying to find him. When they do, he sees a world more technologically advanced but with the same old hatreds. The 2000-year-old man is tired and wants to go home for he no longer believes that the destroyer can be defeated. Nora, a Harvard graduate student, is almost kidnapped by members of Hamas and a Roman Catholic priest. He saves her and disappears but Nora tracks him down in Paris where she learns the truth about her long-living relative. The destroyer knowing he is loose, sets in motion a series of events that bring the world to the edge of war and he vows to fight him one more time.

Told from the viewpoints of many different characters including the hero, one can understand why immortality is as much a curse as it is a blessing. There is no sense of Divinity about the protagonist but he is a catalyst that sets events in motion the ongoing battle of good and evil. Surprisingly, this is not a preachy or apostatizing story but reads more like an urban fantasy in which the powers of good and evil fight for supremacy. Mark Andrew Olson is a talent comparable to Frank Peretti and Jerry Jenkins.

Harriet Klausner

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5.0 out of 5 stars Don't miss this one!, July 2 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: The Assignment (Paperback)
This was one of the best books I've read in a long time. The multiple points of view and the flashbacks in this book didn't confuse me at all. I was so engrossed in the story that everything flowed together brilliantly. This book has it all- beautiful prose,an intriguing premise, great suspense, history, and well-balanced supernatural/spiritual scenes. If you are looking for an alternative to the Da Vinci Code, this is THE book to read. Mark Andrew Olsen is a very talented author and I look forward to reading his future books.
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