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The Facade: Special Edition by Michael S.…
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The Facade: Special Edition (edition 2012)

by Michael S. Heiser

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
9014298,307 (3.38)1
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Book Review of The Facade; Special Edition (Kindle)

Heiser says that this his first novel was written while he was in the ABD stage of his Ph.D program. Since he had personal interest in many of the subjects that are included in the story: ancient history, Semitic languages, biblical studies, theology, paranormal and parapsychological topics (especially UFOs), a chance encounter where an Air Force officer explained the Roswell event with something that he "knew" to be false. He also places a "Note to the Reader" just before the story begins that tells us that all historical figures and quotations attributed to them are real and genuine, that every document whether modern or ancient is authentic and real.
The Prologue which follows establishes a rather idiosyncratic view of the Bible, that is, that there are multiple gods found in it.According to his view, they are referred to in several places and that in Genesis 6, they had sex with human women and produced giants, known in Hebrew as nephilim. The Noahic Flood was meant to kill them but did not, as they were reborn. After the Flood, others in God's ancient council also broke ranks with God and produced other hybrid races on earth. That these giants did exist, according to the Bible, I do not disagree. Their source, however, is a matter of pure conjecture on Heiser's part. Although his knowledge of the original languages vastly exceeds my own (I know of Hebrew and Aramaic as being the two languages that the Old Testament is written in...and no more than that! While his degree and subsequent employment by arguably the largest current Bible software producer will prove his expertise in those issues, I too have studied the Bible both devotionally and as a minister. I can say because of that study that his view is not at all orthodox.)
From that rocky beginning, and with the experience of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code still fresh in my mind, his Note to the Reader raised my skepticism to new heights. Heiser, like Brown before him, seems to want the reader to grant credence to his story greater than what the actual facts ought to warrant.
But, I am also a fan of the science fiction genre and, due to receiving my copy through the Early Reviewer program at librarything.com, am required to write my review for publication, at a bare minimum on the librarything.com website, but also wherever else I see fit. So, I am self-publishing here on my own personal blog, goodreads and, if Amazon.com will accept it, there as well. No inducements are made other than the gift of the book nor are any requirements for the review to be favourable.
So now, let's go on to the story!
The first chapter has a scholar of ancient Middle Eastern languages being killed by a mysterious, seemingly supernatural figure for his failure to deliver certain ancient tablets. And the protagonist surfaces in chapter 2, Dr. Brian Scott, who also happens to be an expert in some of those ancient languages. He is met by two men who threaten him and take him away from his regular and unexciting life in Philadelphia because "his country needs him".
Chapter 3 has another person blackmailed into joining the as yet undefined mission, Dr. Kelley; chapter 4 introduces us to 2 more characters with more incomprehensible background info about "the Group" and some, as yet unknown grave situation that even the President of the US has not yet been informed of. It turns out that Dr. Bandstra of chapter 5 is one of Brian's closest (and only) friends and has requested that he be brought to where they now are to help deal with this situation, one that may test his faith greatly.
Chapter 6 flashes us into another different location in a Catholic monastery in Italy...where once again a mysterious figure, this time one that specifies with a "triangular, asp-like face", uses unimaginable powers to immobilize and kill the priest while speaking inside the priest's mind.
The mystery finally begins to be slowly unraveled as a group of civilians gathers together in the as yet undisclosed place where Brian has been taken. Surprisingly, many of them are people with a strong Christian faith, both Protestant and Catholic.
I found that the story was unnecessarily obtuse, tried too hard to slowly reveal what it was all about; bring in false trails to keep the reader guessing and generally somewhat too predictable. Dr. Kelly takes a rather violent dislike to Brian...and is obviously going to fall for him sooner or later. Secret alliances are brought into the picture to help move the plot, as well as anonymous people who have special access to restricted areas of the facility they are now locked up in. UFOs and possible supernatural beings with super human abilities are gradually revealed while other explanations for their abilities are also teased out. But the story does not move seamlessly, naturally; rather, it moves by starts and stops.
The characters also did not really grab my heart strings. Even when reading, and maybe especially when reading novels, I want to actually care about the actors and I couldn't get to that place here.
When the action finally begins heating up to the place where some resolution would be expected, it fizzles out with a fairy tale ending suggested but not made concrete.
The Facade was much better than I believe I could create myself at this time, but it was not a story that I feel is ready for publication. The denouement needs some serious work as does the pacing and the gradual reveal of the elements of the plot. When you add in the rather strange theology about hybrid human beings and try to make it sound Biblical and add it Roswell with the UFOs, and try to tack on to all of this some kind of apocalyptic end of the world conspiracy, I think there is just too much confusion, too many lines of thought for there to be one unified story here. Heiser may yet grow and write better stories than this one. Good luck. ( )
  thedenathome | Jul 17, 2014 |
Showing 13 of 13
I pretty entertaining story that ties Christianity/UFO's into a story that kept me engaged. The author is a Prof at a seminary, a writer and works for a bible software company. There is a sequel which I will be starting next I think.

I enjoyed this story mostly as a audiobook which the norm for me. The narrator somewhat annoying to me at first, mainly that there was a sound of whining in most of the dialog. But I got used to it was able to ignore it by the middle of the book. Currently the sequel is not out as an audiobook which is a bummer.
( )
  sgsmitty | Jun 14, 2023 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
Book Review of The Facade; Special Edition (Kindle)

Heiser says that this his first novel was written while he was in the ABD stage of his Ph.D program. Since he had personal interest in many of the subjects that are included in the story: ancient history, Semitic languages, biblical studies, theology, paranormal and parapsychological topics (especially UFOs), a chance encounter where an Air Force officer explained the Roswell event with something that he "knew" to be false. He also places a "Note to the Reader" just before the story begins that tells us that all historical figures and quotations attributed to them are real and genuine, that every document whether modern or ancient is authentic and real.
The Prologue which follows establishes a rather idiosyncratic view of the Bible, that is, that there are multiple gods found in it.According to his view, they are referred to in several places and that in Genesis 6, they had sex with human women and produced giants, known in Hebrew as nephilim. The Noahic Flood was meant to kill them but did not, as they were reborn. After the Flood, others in God's ancient council also broke ranks with God and produced other hybrid races on earth. That these giants did exist, according to the Bible, I do not disagree. Their source, however, is a matter of pure conjecture on Heiser's part. Although his knowledge of the original languages vastly exceeds my own (I know of Hebrew and Aramaic as being the two languages that the Old Testament is written in...and no more than that! While his degree and subsequent employment by arguably the largest current Bible software producer will prove his expertise in those issues, I too have studied the Bible both devotionally and as a minister. I can say because of that study that his view is not at all orthodox.)
From that rocky beginning, and with the experience of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code still fresh in my mind, his Note to the Reader raised my skepticism to new heights. Heiser, like Brown before him, seems to want the reader to grant credence to his story greater than what the actual facts ought to warrant.
But, I am also a fan of the science fiction genre and, due to receiving my copy through the Early Reviewer program at librarything.com, am required to write my review for publication, at a bare minimum on the librarything.com website, but also wherever else I see fit. So, I am self-publishing here on my own personal blog, goodreads and, if Amazon.com will accept it, there as well. No inducements are made other than the gift of the book nor are any requirements for the review to be favourable.
So now, let's go on to the story!
The first chapter has a scholar of ancient Middle Eastern languages being killed by a mysterious, seemingly supernatural figure for his failure to deliver certain ancient tablets. And the protagonist surfaces in chapter 2, Dr. Brian Scott, who also happens to be an expert in some of those ancient languages. He is met by two men who threaten him and take him away from his regular and unexciting life in Philadelphia because "his country needs him".
Chapter 3 has another person blackmailed into joining the as yet undefined mission, Dr. Kelley; chapter 4 introduces us to 2 more characters with more incomprehensible background info about "the Group" and some, as yet unknown grave situation that even the President of the US has not yet been informed of. It turns out that Dr. Bandstra of chapter 5 is one of Brian's closest (and only) friends and has requested that he be brought to where they now are to help deal with this situation, one that may test his faith greatly.
Chapter 6 flashes us into another different location in a Catholic monastery in Italy...where once again a mysterious figure, this time one that specifies with a "triangular, asp-like face", uses unimaginable powers to immobilize and kill the priest while speaking inside the priest's mind.
The mystery finally begins to be slowly unraveled as a group of civilians gathers together in the as yet undisclosed place where Brian has been taken. Surprisingly, many of them are people with a strong Christian faith, both Protestant and Catholic.
I found that the story was unnecessarily obtuse, tried too hard to slowly reveal what it was all about; bring in false trails to keep the reader guessing and generally somewhat too predictable. Dr. Kelly takes a rather violent dislike to Brian...and is obviously going to fall for him sooner or later. Secret alliances are brought into the picture to help move the plot, as well as anonymous people who have special access to restricted areas of the facility they are now locked up in. UFOs and possible supernatural beings with super human abilities are gradually revealed while other explanations for their abilities are also teased out. But the story does not move seamlessly, naturally; rather, it moves by starts and stops.
The characters also did not really grab my heart strings. Even when reading, and maybe especially when reading novels, I want to actually care about the actors and I couldn't get to that place here.
When the action finally begins heating up to the place where some resolution would be expected, it fizzles out with a fairy tale ending suggested but not made concrete.
The Facade was much better than I believe I could create myself at this time, but it was not a story that I feel is ready for publication. The denouement needs some serious work as does the pacing and the gradual reveal of the elements of the plot. When you add in the rather strange theology about hybrid human beings and try to make it sound Biblical and add it Roswell with the UFOs, and try to tack on to all of this some kind of apocalyptic end of the world conspiracy, I think there is just too much confusion, too many lines of thought for there to be one unified story here. Heiser may yet grow and write better stories than this one. Good luck. ( )
  thedenathome | Jul 17, 2014 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I was interested in reading this book because it is an apocalyptic thriller (the same genre that I write currently). The prologue opens with written explanation (which seems like a biblical, nonfiction material or short dissertation on nephilims). I am curious about the "Watchers" and interested in the Nephilims who are half-human and half-demon and filled with a demonic spirit. (In future, I will write on this subject area and curious on the author's interpretation, tone, and direction taken on writing such a novel.)

As I started reading the book, I loved the emotions evoked, suspense of a dark being in the room after discussing about his artifacts and dealing with customs in Iraq, and engaging dialogue. Slightly further in the story, once they are with the Group and in the Facility, there is rumors about extraterrestrial life forms and mad cow disease going on with a debriefing on the subject which started losing me in the storyline. Early on, I thought it was on spiritual dark beings... His writing style is good, but then he encompasses so much 1947/50s insight from alien sightings and other scientific measures while I am waiting for the plot to thicken and reveal some loose ends I read in the earlier chapters. I hope the conclusions will unfold, not leave me hanging in a 524 paged book.

I received an eBook copy from the publisher for a book review on LibraryThing.

Adrienna Turner
Author of "God is in the Equation"
www.dream4more.us (Dream 4 More Reviews) ( )
  Adrienna_Turner | Feb 17, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
This could have been a brilliant book - a secret organization masterminding a conspiracy to get the world "used to" the idea that extraterrestrials exist and are here. Unfortunately, it's not brilliant, it's a bit of a mess. The pacing is all wrong; there's way to much exposition and setup to the story. The characters are cardboard and easily slotted into the usual stereotypes for this kind of story. The religious aspects were heavy-handed.

Ultimately, I just didn't buy the premise, though. It would be easy to manipulate the public into accepting UFOs. Just flood the market with books and movies about aliens, and build stories like the Roswell crash into our culture. Uh, kinda like Hollywood's been doing for the last few decades....

Anyway, the book's flaws are many and I just can't recommend it. ( )
  drneutron | Feb 14, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
~~~ Read the full review at http://www.robbflynn.com/?p=2257 ~~~

There’s lots to like about Michael S. Heiser’s The Facade. There’s also a lot to dislike. As a novel, I think it fails. Utterly and miserably. As a scholarly exploration, however, I found it intriguing and compelling.

And that’s where the difficulty comes in offering some insight into The Facade.

Let’s get the story part out of the way first, I suppose, so we can end on a high note.

The premise is a strong one. A secret agency, both within the government and, yet, outside its purview, is gathering some of the greatest scientific and theologic minds in the United States. Gathering them forcefully, I should add. Their task? To ready the world, specifically the world’s religions, for the coming of extra-terrestrials.

The concept is brilliant. The execution… not so much.

~~~ Read the full review at http://www.robbflynn.com/?p=2257 ~~~ ( )
  RobbFlynn | Feb 5, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
How does your religion and the possibility of extraterrestrials mix? That's what this book is all about! I enjoyed reading this book and at the same time found it a bit disconcerting as well. Not sure I believe everything has happened, but do I think it could happen? Why not? I enjoyed the development of the budding friendship/romance between the 2 main characters, but am starting to feel quite duped by authors that leave us hanging (like here) to read the sequel. Yes - I will read the sequel because I want to know what happens next. I got a little bogged down in the middle when everyone was talking in depth and details about some of the religious context and on the other hand the book ended quite abruptly. ( )
  Laura_Corbett | Feb 1, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
First-time author Michael S. Heiser crafts an absorbing supernatural thriller colored from the backdrop of UFO lore and Biblical theology. The story is fiction, but the author stresses that the historical UFO accounts, and subsequent official quotes, are real. Whether you believe that or not, and in my opinion it's not necessary that you do, Heister's The Facade is a fine read.

Some mentions: The narrative pacing is quick and balanced—the urgency never lets up. The interactions between the players are fun even though there's a lot of standing around in groups and talking, and it didn't help that some of the minor characters are hard to distinguish from one another. And lastly, a wish of mine, I would like to have seen more personal failings in Dr. Scott's past. I know this goes against his Christian integrity, but I feel he would be a stronger character because of it. ( )
  Daniel.Estes | Jan 28, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I read most of this book, but just couldn't finish it. I think the idea was compelling enough (and in the hands of someone like Dan Brown or the late Michael Crichton it would've rocked), but it just wasn't executed very well.

"The Facade" is about a special US government organization (with the original name "The Group") that is preparing the world for the realization that aliens are here, more are coming, and that they want to coexist with us. They gather a group of folks who are tasked with finding the best way to break the news to the world.

There were two components of the book that were intriguing. The author, Michael Heiser, first claims that all documents, photos, quotes, etc. are real. And many of them regard Roswell, Area 51, etc. Secondly, the main protagonist, a religious scholar, provides Biblical quotes about other sons of God as well as a race of beings other than humans. Much of this comes from books that are not included in the traditional Bible as well as the supposedly original texts that might have been translated incorrectly.

The problem is that Heiser tries to be too clever with the plot twists and characters that it just becomes a mess. So much so that for me, I just didn't care anymore. ( )
  Jarratt | Jan 26, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
I'll be honest and say up front that I am an agnostic. This book is written from a Christian perspective, and involves matters of religious belief.

But I can be fair and evaluate the book as a piece of literature, rather than as a religious tract.

The book starts off very shakily - poorly written, little or no coherence, little or no cohesiveness. It is as if Heiser was not sure how to begin. The story does become a bit more substantial as the book progresses, but there are still some problems: some of it is a bit predictable - you know who the bad guys are, for the most part (even the ones who are supposed to be surprises); there is a lot of contrivance (it reads as though the hero and heroine are both constructed by Heiser after watching a few months of bad TV and using TV characters as his models); there are sections where I lost track of certain fundamentals (like story location, which shifts for no apparent reason). Overall, the logic of the story is a little askew. The book ends abruptly, only to be followed by several chapters of - guess what - the sequel.

IT'S A TRAP!!!!

I won't bother reading the sequel, as the transition to it from this book is implausible - except, perhaps, in the context of the book; but it does represent what I felt to be morally reprehensible values. ( )
  jpporter | Jan 26, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
“I’m pregnant.” Is that anyway to end a book? It drives me crazy when I spend hours reading a book, start getting really involved in the outcome and then find out that it ends with, “I’m pregnant,” and there is going to be another book soon.
Now that I have gotten that out of the way, I will do the review. I liked the book; it was a little too heavy at times on the Biblical references, but they got easier to understand as the book progressed. It was fascinating the way the plot went from alien-devil-alien-devil. I was never convinced that it was either or, but the presentations were interesting.
In the Note to the Reader, it states that all quotes, documents and ancient text are genuine or authentic. I have a problem believing that. If all of them were true, we would all be out looking for UFO’s and I have never meet anyone who has been abducted and experimented on. The plot line about mad cow disease was very intriguing and I could easily see our government doing something like this. I also found the government facilities described in the book a little unbelievable. I worked for the Department of Defense for 27 years and they told some whoppers, but the details in the book were a little too much for me.
Dr. Brian Scott is a very likeable character. At the beginning of the book, he seems like an unlikely hero, but he moves into the role without any problems. His encyclopedic knowledge of anything to do with the Bible and many ancient languages makes him the perfect protagonist for the book. It will be interesting to see how this knowledge serves him in the next book. ( )
1 vote hansue | Jan 24, 2013 |
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.
To be frank, I wasn't at all sure about this book - all the biblical references were enough to almost send this agnostic scurrying for cover. But after a couple of chapters I began to settle more comfortably into the world created by Mr Heiser. Multi layered plot lines with flawed characters that were frustrating at times certainly meant the story was anything but dull.

At first I found the Biblical references somewhat off putting, but as the story developed they seemed to fit more seamlessly within the story structure. In some ways this story would test the reader's commitment to seeing hero Brian and his fellow team members through to the end. The UFO / extraterrestrial skeptic would have ditched it early on. Then we are also tested with esoteric beings known by various names including 'the Watchers' who are apparently walking the earth along side humankind just waiting for their chance to wrest back their god status. Setting the story within the framework of Roswell and adding the pictures of the genuine "files" as presented as part of the evidence proving the existence of extraterrestrials attempted to add a certain 'authenticity' to the story.

Challenging concepts at the best of times however this story was engaging enough to ensure I made the journey through to the final pages. I could not, however, bring myself to read the additional introductory section to the sequel attached at the end of the ebook. ( )
  australwind | Jan 20, 2013 |
Excellent Primer on the UFO phenomena ( )
1 vote madscience | Oct 6, 2008 |
Not award winning prose by any stretch, but an interesting enough story, especially if you've studied ancient Near Eastern backgrounds to the Bible and you happen to like shows like the X-Files. ( )
  placo75 | Dec 22, 2006 |
Showing 13 of 13

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