This book follows several characters during an election campaign.
We meet members of the campaign teams, journalists and a bishop.
Each person has their history, their goals, and ambitions, their personal issues, their doubts, their beliefs.
Somehow, they all end up intertwined.
A journalist writing about his friend, and mentor, ends up uncovering files that lead him into an investigation about child molestation allegations. While he starts the investigation with the wrong idea, what he discovers will lead him to discredit not only the church but also an election campaign.
We get religion and politics all wrapped up with sexual abuse claims, tax reduction, and promoting a candidate during the sermons.
Bishops running churches as a business, caring about the image and the revenue more than about the children and families.
As the story develops, we see the different attitudes the characters have, and how that influences the next events. How one person's wrongdoings affect not only himself but the image and life of others.
The story seems so real as if it could happen tomorrow. The intrigue, the lies, the secrets, and the corruption are present both in religious and political contexts. There were some parts of this book that disgusted me: the way humans can hurt others just to make themselves look good; how damaging it is for a child to feel so unloved that when he is molested, he welcomes the attention and the love; the ability to prey on the weak.
The book also touches on how events can make us doubt our religion and our beliefs. That a religious person may not know how to deal with the fact that the church is corrupt. How that may change their whole perspective on what it means to be religious. How sometimes you have to doubt everything and make hard decisions in order to do what you feel is right.
This is one of those books where things build up slowly and then suddenly it all falls into place.
About halfway through the book, it was really hard to put down because the story is really engaging.
I think readers of political thrillers, or thrillers, in general, will enjoy this book. However, it might not be for you if you want to ignore the sad reality of child molestation. The book does tell a child's perspective and how the situation affected his life.
(Received the ebook in exchange for an honest review)