A Plague, a Villain And Then There’s Rome

Jack Hyland is a man of many parts. Harvard MBA, former investment banker and longtime weekend resident of Dutchess County, Hyland has just published his first novel, “The Moses Virus,” a mystery set mostly in Rome. The idea for the book came to Hyland, then president of the American Academy in Rome, nine years ago when he spent a day with archeologists exploring aqueducts under the ruins of the Roman Forum. What if the archeologists inhaled a deadly virus and died immediately? Hyland’s imagination was off and running. The book, which may remind readers of Michael Crichton and Dan Brown, eventually links the virus under the Forum to the 10 plagues of Egypt that God delivered in the Old Testament to free the Israelites from Pharaoh. For his book, Hyland invents an 11th, the eponymous Moses virus. The book’s main character, Tom Stewart, is a barely disguised stand-in for Hyland himself. Through Stewart we see an intimate Rome, filled with names and places Hyland knows well. But we also get a wonderfully sinister villain, Bailitz; a sweeping indictment of international agribusiness; a history lesson on the Vatican’s relations with Nazi Germany; two beautiful women on opposite sides in the race to find and destroy the virus and descriptions of the horrible plagues that killed millions of people through the centuries. Hyland has written continually since his days at Williams College. His travel articles have been syndicated by Hearst and The New York Times, and he has published a biography of his grandfather, Bill Stidger, an evangelist who became a nationwide media star in the first half of the 20th century. Hyland keeps detailed notes on all his travels and daily experiences. His descriptions of places are real and immediately compelling. Hyland says he began writing in longhand on lined yellow sheets but soon switched to a computer as he realized how complicated the book’s structure was becoming. The narrative is perhaps slowed by descriptive digressions, but the last 50 pages are almost cinematic, as the many characters hurtle toward resolution. Well, resolution for this first book at least. Hyland is already writing a sequel. A reception and book signing for Jack Hyland and “The Moses Virus” will be at Johnnycake Books in Salisbury, CT, Saturday, Jan. 25, from 5 to 7 p.m.

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