Review of The Biblical Clock
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Review of The Biblical Clock
The Biblical Clock by Daniel Friedmann and Dania Sheldon has three parts namely; beginning and timeline, ending and the last part is beyond the timeline. Part one has seven chapters. Part two has four chapters. Part three has two chapters. The novel begins by discussing the siege of Acre in Spain. Isaac was around when all this was happening. He prepared himself to flee. As he hurriedly walked he realised that the Muslim fighters had streamed into the adjacent streets. Most Christians and Jews were killed. Isaac was useful to the Mamluks and he was taken a prisoner. Where do you think the earth originated from? How old is the world? Isaac’s manuscript has calculations trying to identify the age of the world. In Russia, David owned a library with a collection of ancient Hebrew manuscripts. Read this novel to learn more. Have ever imagined what the end times will look like?
I like how this novel engages its readers. It thanks its readers for reading this novel. It has a collection of extra information about this novel and a glossary which is a brief dictionary for word related to this book and those words which you are seeking to understand them. There is also employed on the use visual perception hence there are twenty-five images. It also provides credit to all photos. I also like how numbers representing certain figures have been employed. Tables are also involved. I also like the systematic narrative of past events as relating to the bible and science in this novel. The description involved makes it look like a movie. It ignited my imagination. In addition, I like how the author used a different fond to indicate a narration.
Even though the explanation was good I just got bored while reading this novel. The suspense involved is minimal. I didn’t like it when I was able to predict what will happen next.
I rate this novel 4 out of 4 stars. It has been edited professionally. It has zero levels of profanity, it has no errors, no typos and no vulgar words. The main theme was well maintained. There was no deviation in all topics. This qualified the novel to earn all the stars.
All in all, I finished it. I will highly recommend reading it. It has a narrative of war, history, religions and science-related stories. It also mentions great scholars like Einstein and Aristotle. I find this novel suitable for lovers of history, people who want to relate the bible with science, scientist Christians and all non-fiction lovers.
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The Biblical Clock
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- olomunyak
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I always ask myself a lot of questions about this but I can't find good answers to my question.
This review has also tried to discuss it. It is fascinating and it has ignited my imagination.
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I think it will be horrific and scary.
Thanks for this review
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I don't know much about Jewish scriptures but the Bible and the quraan, as well as extra-biblical texts and the prophetic tradition have vivid descriptions of the end of the world. Its always scary to read or think about.
I wasn't sure of what to expect from the title but now you've intrigued me.
Thanks for a great review.
- Ldpuff
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Thank you for your detailed review.
― Horace Mann
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