The Rozabel Line: Ashish Sanghi

The Rozabel Line Ashish Sanghi Book
by Ashish Sanghi

Book Comments & Discussion

aquarian1
The author in political correctness states this book is a work of fiction. Is it..really? I wonder. One would require to read it with an open mind not too severely tainted by religious dogma and/or fundamentalism.

If you liked Dan Browne's books, here's an alternate truth, perhaps far more acceptable, even to the most devoutly spiritual person !

For people who love history as a subject..more material.

For people interested in the reality of the lost years of Christ, 11 years in total of his childhood this book will hold interest.

For those who have always maintained that he survived the crucifixion this book will provide further insight.

For the skeptics, cynics, born-again types..this book will open a few windows , if not doors in their dusty cobwebbed upper echelons!

For those who pointedly ignore, discard, deride any written material for its lack of authenticity on account of lack of evidence, proof and/or references..this book will provide REFERENCE NOTES at the end.
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Storyline

On a lazy day in London, a cardboard box is found on a shelf of the SOAS library where a copy of Mahabharata should have been. When the mystified librarian opens it, she screams before she falls unconscious to the floor.
An elite group calling itself the Lashkar-e-Talatashar, the army of thirteen, has scattered around the globe. The fate of its members curiously resembles that of Christ and his Apostles in the first century AD. Their leader is not even a blip on the radar of intelligence agencies, yet their agenda is Armageddon.
Somewhere in the labyrinthine recesses of the Vatican, a beautiful assassin swears she will eliminate all who do not believe in her twisted credo. She loves to kill-again and again.
A Hindu Astrologer spots an approaching conjunction of the stars and nods to himself in grim agreement. It will happen on the very date he had seen as the end of the world. And it's not far off.
In Tibet, a group of Buddhist monks search for a reincarnation, much in the way their ancestors searched Judea for the son of God.
In strife-torn Kashmir, a tomb called Rozabal holds the key to a riddle that arises in Jerusalem and gets answered at Vaishno Devi.
An American priest, Father Vincent Sinclair, has disturbing visions of himself and of people familiar to him, except that they seem located in other worlds, other ages. Induced into past -life regression, he goes to India to piece together the violent images burnt onto his mind.
Shadowing his every move is the Crux Decussata Permuta, a clandestine society which would rather wipe out creation than allow an ancient secret to be disclosed.
In The Rozabal Line, a thriller swirling between continents and centuries, Ashwin Sanghi traces a pattern that curls backward to the violent birth of religion itself.
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