Reviewed by Peter Santucci,
Lebanon; United States
Michael
O'Brien has a tendency to overwrite his books (one of his very few flaws as a
writer). But in Plague Journal, he reined himself in (or finally got an editor
who did) and the result is a book that is no less packed with plot tension,
cultural criticism, and character development than his other tomes.The middle
book of a trilogy of books about the Delaney family (starting with Strangers
and Sojourners and ending with Eclipse of the Sun), Plague Journal also fits
within O'Brien's larger series, which he calls Children of the Last Days. The
first of those is the explosive novel Father Elijah. While
Plague Journal is my personal favorite. I recommend reading it after Father
Elijah and Strangers and Sojourners, since it needs the other two to provide
its context in O'Brien's view of the Last Days. And O'Brien's view is a bleak one. The government has become the
tool of the antichrist, whether it knows it or not, and an honest journalist
(even one who doesn't have a living faith in God) can't get an honest shake, but
is hunted down. Swift, sharp, and poigniant, O'Brien provides his readers with
everything that Left Behind readers should have gotten but didn't and without
all of the silly speculations. This is good literature that shapes the heart
and the mind Christianly.