Summer's Reviews > Left Behind

Left Behind by Tim LaHaye

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36813
's review
Jan 01, 08

bookshelves: 2007, novels

I felt left out of the Bad Books Club because I completely failed to get past the first chapter of The DaVinci Code, so I read this to keep up. And boy, is this one horrible book! And there's at least 11 more of them! (N.B. - I will not be reading the rest of the series)

The writing is beyond terrible. In a story that presents so many interesting narrative possibilities - the grief of those "left behind" after The Rapture, the breakdown of society after a massive tragedy, the personal pain and soul-searching of those who believed they had faith but who were found wanting - and ignores them all in favor of people sitting on beds and talking on phones. The authors say that there is violence and mayhem, but don't show any of it. The main characters' conversions to Christianity happen as almost an afterthought - there is little description of the feeling of God's love, of how they will change their lives and live by the teachings of Jesus. The book could have been about 300 pages shorter for all it has of any substance, or it could have remained the same length and added some actual plot or character development.

Oh my, the characters. Our Two Heroes are named Rayford Steele and Buck Williams. The current president is named Gerald Fitzhugh (totally not supposed to evoke John Fitzgerald Kennedy, I'm sure!). Williams's editor is named Steve Plank, and I presume that if this naming scheme keeps up, later volumes will include media mogul Robert Mudrock and sassy reporter June Heat-Register. There are two women in the book, and both of them are boy-crazy and even find the time to get makeovers in the middle of the horrors of the post-rapture world. They are also wholly without personality, but so are all the male characters. The Antichrist shoots his two closest business partners in order to command respect, and then uses his evil hypnosis skills to make everyone in the room forget about it. So what was the point? There's also a great throwaway line about how much Planned Parenthood loves its filthy abortion money, and how they're so sad they no longer have any babies to abort (no mention is made of reproductive health, etc.)

Theologically, this book is on shaky ground as well. There is the aforementioned avoidance of actually describing the process of converstion, and there is little Biblical evidence given for the Rapture itself (an event which many Christian sects do not believe in and see no textual evidence for). Questions are brought up (in the book!) about God's seemingly abusive role in forcing people to accept Jesus's sacrifice and love for humanity by secondhandedly killing scores of people in the aftermath of an event where drivers of cars disappeared suddenly. If the seven years of tribulation are supposed to give the unbelievers a second chance, how about all of those poor souls who died in accidents, or who were stricken with heart attacks? These questions are not answered in the slightest, and I was slightly thrown off by the book's refusal to capitalize "Him" when speaking of the divine. It's an ostensibly religious book without any real faith.

This could have been such an interesting story, but the writing is so utterly awful that the series stands as dangerously bad. It does nothing to address the mystery of faith and the horrors of the Apocalpse - it could be any third-rate spy thriller gathering dust on an airport bookshelf. And it's so damnedly popular!

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Comments (showing 1-7 of 7) (7 new)

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Summer Aw :3

I was actually genuinely interested in the L.B. series and what all the fuss was about, and now that I've read the one book, I understand it even less. This is some seriously terrible writing.


Summer oh hey I just realized that the name of the Antichrist, Nicolae Carpathia, can be rearranged to spell Antichri a cola ape. CREEPY


message 3: by [deleted user] (new)

I felt the exact same way about the first book...but you have GOT to keep MOTIVATED and OPTIMISTIC! Ha! really though, I was very suprised by the time I got to the third book. It got so good that I read the majority of the left behind series in 2005...almost all of them in one year, I couldn't put them down.


Rylan McQuade Love the review. Couldn't agree with you more.


Norah I was brought up among people, some of whom believed all that stuff, and scared the pants off the children to get them to 'believe'! Thank God I realised years later that the Bible does not actually support this theory! Couldn't resist reading the book, and agree with this reviewer wholeheartedly!


Bella Michel I completely agree with this comment. This series is beyond over-rated. Generally a series can lose itself in later novels but the first book, itself, was a large disappointment for me.


message 7: by Darryl (new)

Darryl Markowitz What is really awesome about your review here, is that you see so many real possibilities for good writing here. That's a different kind of response than the knee-jerk I hate it because I do. I came here curious because in bookstores I open a lot of books to a page here and there. But every time I opened any of LB books I got the same cringe in my gut. Now I know my short impressions are accurate. Thanks for this review.


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