![]() ![]() It’s part thriller, part science fiction with a lot of philosophy thrown in for good measure. It’s difficult to pigeon-hole City of Pillars. ![]() He deftly puts the reader inside Mitchell Sinclair’s head for, this is his story. While it is often thought that a thriller needs lots of dialogue in order to be truly effective, Dominic Peloso, in City of Pillars, shows the beauty of narrative. As he flees the mysterious ‘men in black,’ Sinclair finds himself at times doubting his own sanity – or insanity. This ‘chance’ happening – or, so it seems at first – sets him on a journey that spans the globe, from San Francisco to Machu Picchu in Peru but, even more importantly, a journey into his own tortured consciousness. The package contains a sheaf of documents written in strange languages, and as Sinclair struggles to translate them, his life is turned inside out and upside down. He’s living what one would describe as ‘the good life,’ until one day, while crossing the Golden Gate Bridge on the way to his law firm, a strange toll booth collector tosses an even stranger package into his car. He has a good house in Marin County, north of San Francisco, a trophy wife, Sarah, and a shiny black 1958 Cadillac Sedan. Mitchell Sinclair is an up and coming young lawyer. ![]() Review: “City of Pillars” by Dominic Peloso ![]()
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May 2023
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