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| In God's Name: An Investigation Into the Murder of Pope John Paul I | 
enlarge | Author: David Yallop Publisher: Basic Books Category: Book
List Price: $16.95 Buy New: $9.46 You Save: $7.49 (44%)
Buy New/Used/Collectible from $9.22
Avg. Customer Rating:   (49 reviews) Sales Rank: 94664
Format: Illustrated Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 480 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.1 x 1
ISBN: 0786719842 Dewey Decimal Number: 364.15240945634 EAN: 9780786719846 ASIN: 0786719842
Publication Date: April 8, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
An investigation into the murder of Pope John Paul I.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 44 more reviews...
  So glad it's back in print! October 15, 2008 I first read this book in the early 90s, a version in Spanish purchased in Panama. I find this book so revealing and wonderful that this kind of investigation and information is being made available to the public! I had looked for this book in english many years, and for a long time I couldn't find anyone that would sell it, until recently. Very happy that is now available. I've purchased David Yallop's book on John Paul II also, and I'm reading now, as there are more truths to be found. I recommend this book to anyone who is looking for truthful information, facts, about this topic.
  Begin your investigation with 'In God's Name' August 10, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Murder in the Vatican: The Revolutionary Life of John Paul and The CIA, Opus Dei and the 1978 Murders
In 1984, David Yallop's `In God's Name' did a riveting job in proving this Pope was murdered. In fact, no one is going to walk away from this book without the firm conviction this man was murdered. Nevertheless, through the years, Yallop's best seller has ignited a mass of `papal murder' literature, most of which like Paul Williams' `The Vatican Exposed' adhere to Yallop's convincing hypothesis John Paul was murdered because of his involvement in the Vatican Bank. There are a few like `A Thief in the Night' by John Cornwell which try unsuccessfully to prove Yallop wrong - that this Pope died a natural death. It is a tall order to challenge Yallop's contention this Pope was murdered, as the facts as published in the world press which he details in brilliant methodical fashion prove his case.
Concerning `why' the Pope was murdered, there are a few books which differ from the mainstream. One author, Lucien Gregoire, takes the investigation in a different direction. In `The CIA, Opus Dei and the 1978 Murders' Gregoire writes, "`The death of the pro-Communist Pontiff Paul VI gave the CIA the opportunity to force election of a pro-American Pope. The CIA joined factions sponsoring the Opus Dei anti-Communist candidate Polish Cardinal Wojtyla. When Luciani (John Paul I), an avowed Marxist in every sense of the word, particularly in his ambition to rid the world of poverty, was elected, it struck a nerve of shattering proportions in the United States. Particularly so, in that, as a cardinal, Luciani had openly supported Oscar Romero and the revolutionaries in Central America. As a pope, he changed the theme of the upcoming Pueblo (Mexico) Conference from 'Liberation Theology' to 'Liberation of the Poor' - he preferred to feed them food rather than faith - and announced that he, himself, would attend it. The perils of potential multi-Cubas became imminent. The dangers to the security of the United States had become real. . ." Yet, no one should read any book concerning the revolutionary life and mysterious death of this Pope without first reading `In God's Name', the classic Blueprint for Murder of a Pontiff.
  ...The Truth Shall Set You Free May 6, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
This is an erudite accounting of BOTH the putative murder of Pope John Paul I and Vatican finances. Written by an editor of the Wall Street Journal, this book reads like an arcane mystery or true crime book. It is a good reminder that the love of money breeds evil. A must read for crime buffs and good Catholics (I am one!)
  It's the Tops! December 22, 2007 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
Murder in the Vatican: The Revolutionary Life of John Paul and The CIA, Opus Dei and the 1978 Murders
Yallop does a riveting job in proving this pope was murdered; something that most Europeans already know, yet, Americans find hard to accept.
Anyone who takes the time to read `In God's Name' will find that Yallop's investigation is not based on assumptions or conjecture, but absolute fact. Yallop presents substantial evidence pointing to Cardinal Villot, the Vatican Secretary of State, and Paul Marcinkus, the President of the Vatican Bank, as being among the culprits. I followed Albino Luciani for many years and I have read every book about his death, and I have found that all of Yallop's copycats have concluded that these two were among the conspirators.
Recently I found an exception. Lucien Gregoire's `Murder in the Vatican - The CIA, Opus Dei and the 1978 Murders' points its finger in another direction. Gregoire writes, "`The death of the pro-Communist Pontiff Paul VI gave the CIA the opportunity to force election of a pro-American Pope. The CIA joined factions sponsoring the Opus Dei anti-Communist candidate Polish Cardinal Wojtyla. When Luciani (John Paul I), an avowed Marxist in every sense of the word, particularly in his ambition to rid the world of poverty, was elected, it struck a nerve of shattering proportions in the United States. Particularly, in that, as a cardinal, Luciani had openly supported Oscar Romero and the revolutionaries in Central America. The perils of potential multi-Cubas became imminent. The dangers to the security of the United States had become real. . ." CIA-Vatican intrigue of the first rank. Gregoire's book is supported by hundreds of direct press and other references that prove his case. see JohnPaul1 org
Yet, anyone interested in this subject, should begin with `In God's Name'. There is a reason why it sold over six million copies. It's the tops, you know.
  When the politicking that goes on when a pope is elected turns to murder . . . November 19, 2007 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
From 1978 to 1983, the Vatican's strategy was to suppress the memory of the liberal 33 day pope and the true circumstances of his mysterious death. Then in 1984, David Yallop's `In God's Name' did a riveting job in proving this pope was murdered. In 1985, the Vatican recruited clergy in several countries to write brief biographical sketches that painted him out to be a man who ignored the issues of his day and spent his life on his knees. Nothing could be further from the truth, as for twenty years as a bishop he had been a rampaging locomotive running about the Vatican, the courts and Parliament of Italy struggling for human rights for the oppressed; the reason he had risen to the papacy.
There have been several books written about this pope's unwitnessed death, of which I would give only two of them more than one star. Many of the others have been commissioned by the Vatican to spread the misconception that this man died of a heart attack. Only two of them tell the truth. This book 'In God's Name' and 'Murder in the Vatican' by Lucien Gregoire.
Whereas, no one is going to walk away from either of these books without the firm conviction this man was murdered, there is a difference. Yallop claims the Pope was murdered because of his involvement in the Vatican Bank. Gregoire presents compelling proof that two Opus Dei bishops, who rose to high rank shortly after the Polish pope was elected, conspired with factions of the CIA and British Intelligence in the murders of John Paul and a dozen of his closest allies involved in the war on poverty in the fall of 1978.
Yet, the credit goes mostly to Yallop, for had he not written his book, all the others would have never written their books. Murder in the Vatican: The Revolutionary Life of John Paul and The CIA, Opus Dei and the 1978 Murders
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