The Angel by Guy Thorne

(8 User reviews)   2105
Thorne, Guy, 1875-1923 Thorne, Guy, 1875-1923
English
Okay, so picture this: London, just before the First World War. A brilliant but cynical scientist, Sir Michael Amberley, has built a machine that can record sound from the past. He's convinced he'll prove the world is purely material, with no room for miracles or angels. But then, he decides to point his invention at a specific moment in history: the night of Christ's birth in Bethlehem. What could possibly go wrong? Guy Thorne's 'The Angel' is a wild, speculative ride that asks one of the biggest 'what if' questions I've ever seen in fiction. It's less about angels with harps and more about a man betting his entire worldview on a scientific experiment, with results that will shake his world—and yours—to the core. If you like stories where science and faith crash head-on, you need to pick this up.
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First published in 1908, Guy Thorne's 'The Angel' is a fascinating piece of speculative fiction that feels surprisingly modern in its central question. It's a novel built around one audacious idea.

The Story

Sir Michael Amberley is a famous and wealthy scientist, a man of logic who believes only in what can be proven. His life's work is the 'Chronophone,' a device that can capture and play back sounds from history. To finally silence believers in the supernatural, he aims his machine at the stable in Bethlehem on the first Christmas night. His goal is to record the ordinary, human sounds of a birth, thereby debunking the divine story for good. What the machine actually picks up, however, is something entirely unexpected and impossible to explain by his scientific laws. The discovery sends shockwaves through his life, challenging his closest relationships and forcing him to confront everything he thought he knew.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me wasn't just the clever premise, but the human drama at its heart. Amberley isn't a cartoon villain; he's a proud, intelligent man who has built his identity on being right. Watching his certainty crumble is compelling. Thorne writes with a real energy, and the tension builds beautifully as the experiment's date approaches. The book isn't a heavy theological treatise—it's a gripping story about a man facing an undeniable truth that doesn't fit into his neat, ordered universe. It makes you think: how would any of us react if faced with concrete proof of something we firmly believed was a myth?

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for readers who enjoy classic science fiction with a philosophical punch, like H.G. Wells' stories. It's also great for anyone who likes historical settings with a speculative twist. You don't need a background in science or religion to enjoy it; you just need a curiosity about big ideas. Fair warning: it's a product of its time in some of its style, but the core conflict is timeless. If you're looking for a short, thought-provoking novel that will stick with you long after the last page, 'The Angel' is a hidden gem worth discovering.



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Barbara Thompson
1 year ago

The formatting on this digital edition is flawless.

James Garcia
11 months ago

I was skeptical at first, but it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. A valuable addition to my collection.

Jackson Wilson
6 months ago

Enjoyed every page.

5
5 out of 5 (8 User reviews )

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