Kirkus Reviews & The Last Disciple

Just a quick post to let you know that Kirkus Reviews, one of the top international book reviewers, did a very fine review of book one in The Last Disciple Series:

THE LAST DISCIPLE

CRISIS IN JERUSALEM

From the The Last Disciple series , Vol. 1

BY KURT BROUWER ‧ RELEASE DATE: NOV. 14, 2022

The Last Disciple book cover

A gripping story, powerfully dramatic as well as historically instructive.

Brouwer’s historical novel imagines of the life of John, the son of Zebedee, the last disciple of Jesus.

In 62 AD, Jerusalem is riven by increasingly violent internecine conflict—Zealots, radical Pharisees and Sadducees, and bloodthirsty Sicarii all vie against each other and their Roman overseers for power. John, the youngest disciple of Jesus, is drawn into the fray when James, the leader of the Christian church in Jerusalem, is murdered by Ananus ben Ananus, a high priest and high-ranking Sadducee.

Some radicals pushing for war, like Menahem ben Yehuda of the ultra-violent Sicarii, try to intimidate John into taking up arms. John is caught between the spiritual example of Jesus and the demands of worldly affairs, a tension sensitively evoked by the author: “At what point will I give up all this worldliness, Jesus? Why do I keep striving to change the world when I have not even changed my own heart? When I faced those men today, Lord, I had passionate, powerful thoughts, but my words did not reflect those thoughts. I felt stunted. The life of God within me has stagnated.”

Before he died on the cross, Jesus charged John with taking care of his mother, Mary, but she implores John to travel away from Jerusalem and spread the word of her crucified son. Brouwer chooses a fascinating historical protagonist, one ripe for literary appropriation—John was the youngest and last of Jesus’s apostles, and, the author asserts, his gospel “struck the Christian world like a lightning bolt out of a clear blue sky.”

There is little historical documentation of his life after Jesus’ death, a lacuna filled with novelistic opportunity. Brouwer impressively takes advantage of this, composing a tale both inventive and historically rigorous. For Christians and non-Christians alike, this is an engrossing narrative of faith during a time of political tumult. A gripping story, powerfully dramatic as well as historically instructive.

Kirkus Reviews

My Thanks to Kirkus Reviews

Many thanks to Kirkus Reviews. If you’d like to read more about my Christian historical series, here’s a good post:

Why I Started The Last Disciple Series

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