Flying a Kite


Christian - Fiction
320 Pages
Reviewed on 08/01/2013
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    Book Review

Reviewed by Maria Beltran for Readers' Favorite

Sick with septicemia, Aldo Galliano, a rich Italian businessman is faced with his own mortality and wants to find out if there is really life after death. This is the premise of Flying a Kite by Ian Kingsley. One of the main protagonists, Bruce Kramer, a disillusioned theology graduate, is hired to organize and head a team of researchers. The group only has six months to prove if God really exists or not. Other groups of experts are also working on this and at stake is a one million pound prize for the most convincing argument of God’s existence or non-existence. Will Bruce and his eccentric crew find the meaning of life in a world that is swamped by the latest in scientific technology?

Flying a Kite is a novel that attempts to answer philosophical questions that have baffled philosophers and scientists all over the world since time immemorial. Indeed, these are questions that confront all of us. Does God really exist? What is the meaning of life? Dialogue driven and fast paced, the reader will be entertained by Bruce Kramer and his team as they try to solve life’s mystery itself. Ian Kingsley’s novel reminds me of Jostein Gaarder’s work in Sophie’s World. Whereas Kramer relied heavily on philosophy to prove his point, Kingsley consolidates science and religion in putting forth his novel’s intention. I think one of the greatest achievements of this book is that the author is very successful in creating an entertaining book that deals with a subject as complicated as finding God and the meaning of life.

Jean Hall

Is there a God and what role does he play in our life and in our death? Author Ian Kingsley ponders the full range of metaphysical questions in Flying A Kite. Testing theories about life, death, and spirituality is like flying a kite. You look up into the sky to see if the ideas, like the kite itself, fly successfully.

Galliano, 71, is a multi-millionaire businessman and he is terminally ill from the effects of smoking cigars. He has risen from humble beginnings to run a global conglomerate. The much younger Bruce studied to be a cleric at Cambridge but he has doubts about his faith. Bruce takes Galliano's 6-month challenge to research and report on whether God exists. Bruce has other daunting projects too, from his relationship with his mother to his choice of a girlfriend. A passionate model named Sofia also works on this project, which includes a one-million-pound reward for a convincing argument.

Galliano lays down this scientific and religious gauntlet for Bruce and Sofia. But he has other motives for the project which include his business and family legacy. The older man considers what may loom in the afterlife and the younger man considers the confusing number of options for this life. The simple chapter headings and lively dialogue help to guide the reader through the plot. Author Ian Kingsley takes us on an entertaining journey to consider many viewpoints and philosophies. Faith seems to win out but many questions are left unanswered. The story ends with an enjoyable and deft twist in the plot.