Damascus Quran


UI – Part 657 – Damascus Quran

A few years ago I wrote my first novel. I had written two other books at that time, Wake Up, Wake Up, The Testimony of a Laymen and The Proven God, both non-fiction. Wake Up was a testimony to my Christian faith, how I came to the realization that the Word of God is God. The Proven God provided reviews of various views on faith from philosophers, scientists and atheists, and how they directly or indirectly embraced Biblical ethics and morals in their viewpoints and writing. Subsequent to the novel I wrote The Wonder of Terra, a biblical allegory. However after years of writing about Islam on this blog, I was tempted to write a novel combining my interests in Christianity and Islam, as well as history and literature. The result is The Damascus Quran.

It was reviewed by Kirkus. The review read:

“This sprawling historical novel has an explosive concept at its heart: the discovery of an ancient, alternative Quran.

Balderston’s… book begins in fairly familiar Da Vinci Code territory: Bobby Johnson and Grace Richards are working on the renovation of an old church named Trinity when they discover a crypt and hints of an ancient library on the premises. They learn that the building is owned by a shadowy organization called the Alpha and Omega Society for the Preservation of Truth. For decades, the society has boarded up the library rather than allow its books to incite the world’s anger and rejection—particularly The Wonder of Terra by Father John “Poggio” Dolan, who’d been a part of the society for years but has since retired to Colorado. In order to understand The Wonder, Bobby, Grace and the head of the society jet off to see Dolan, who has a bombshell for them all: Years before, he bought an old manuscript he thought was an ancient Quran, until Ali Malek, a Lebanese friend of his, studied the manuscript and was astonished to discover that it wasn’t a Quran. Rather, it was some kind of alternate Islamic text every bit as old as the Muslim holy book but radically different in several key ways that, if verified and published, would be revolutionary. They anticipate the outrage of the ulema, the scholars of Islam, who’ll cite the relevant passages from the Quran utterly forbidding additions and alterations, let alone wholesale revisions. This alternate Quran could provoke “a battle for control of the Muslim world.” Balderston varies these present-day theological tensions with extensive, well-realized historical segments dramatizing the book’s long history. However, the vibrancy of this history might lead conservative sects to a simple solution: “It was a book that needed to be destroyed.” Balderston skillfully balances these separate strands, blending the past and the present in a potent mixture that will please all but the most religiously zealous readers. A textured, intriguing novel about a world-changing holy book.”

The publisher of the original unfortunately went bankrupt.  However Amazon has paperbacks available from various booksellers, as well as a Kindle version for readers.  They are all at reasonable prices. 

From the back cover:

“You will be taken from modern day America to the 7th century Arabia as a Bible scholar and a linguistic Lebanese minister uncover the secrets of an ancient faith.  What they discover suggests that a document uncovered from the sands of Syria could be the true scripture Allah intended to reveal over a millennia ago.  When an extremist Muslim faction takes action to keep this book from going public and exposing a dark secret about the Islam faith, the truth runs the risk of being buried again.” 

Soon the other books will also be available on Kindle (amazon.com).  Meanwhile enjoy the Damascus Quran.  Download a copy for your reading pleasure.  

Grace and Peace,

by Thomas W. Balderston

Author and Blogger

Leave a Reply

Please log in using one of these methods to post your comment:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s