
Book Details:
Author: Tom Lysaght
Release Date: 22 May 2026Series:
Genre: Religious Mystery, Political Thriller, Suspense
Format: E-book
Pages: 414 pages
Publisher: Pan y Paz Press
Blurb:
She uncovered a secret that powerful men will kill to protect.
Former nun Dr. Jackie McBride once sought heaven. Now, as an astrophysicist, she searches the heavens for truth.
When Jackie uncovers collusion between the Vatican Observatory and a shadow American cabal, she finds evidence of a suppressed reality guarded for generations with lethal force.
The Fatima File contains a revelation powerful enough to fracture the foundations of religious belief—and expose the military-industrial security state.
Now Jackie is a target.
As CIA operatives close in, she joins forces with a disillusioned FBI agent, a Jesuit priest, and a devout circle of young Shi’ah Muslims.
Together they follow a trail of deception from Fatima to Rome to Mount Sinai.
But every revelation brings Jackie closer to a truth more dangerous than the men hunting her.
Because the greatest danger is not the conspiracy.
It is the secret itself.
She uncovered a secret that powerful men will kill to protect.
Former nun Dr. Jackie McBride once sought heaven. Now, as an astrophysicist, she searches the heavens for truth.
When Jackie uncovers collusion between the Vatican Observatory and a shadow American cabal, she finds evidence of a suppressed reality guarded for generations with lethal force.
The Fatima File contains a revelation powerful enough to fracture the foundations of religious belief—and expose the military-industrial security state.
Now Jackie is a target.
As CIA operatives close in, she joins forces with a disillusioned FBI agent, a Jesuit priest, and a devout circle of young Shi’ah Muslims.
Together they follow a trail of deception from Fatima to Rome to Mount Sinai.
But every revelation brings Jackie closer to a truth more dangerous than the men hunting her.
Because the greatest danger is not the conspiracy.
It is the secret itself.
Is the world ready for a revelation that could redefine reality?
Review
The Fatima File: The Case of the Missing Millennium by Tom Lysaght is an ambitious religious-conspiracy thriller that blends Catholic prophecy, Islamic tradition, Vatican secrecy, FBI investigation, and millennial anxiety into one sprawling, idea-rich narrative. The novel begins with the theft of a rare Arabic manuscript connected to Mushaf Fatimah and quickly expands into a much larger mystery involving Father Francis Kelson, the third secret of Fatima, hidden religious knowledge, Project Command, and the possibility that humanity has misunderstood both revelation and history.
At the centre of the novel is FBI agent Johnny Ortiz, whose rare-books investigation leads him into a labyrinth of Catholic iconography, Islamic Fatimid history, vandalised Renaissance paintings, Vatican archives, the Knights of Malta, and covert American intelligence operations. Johnny is one of the book’s most engaging figures because he approaches the mystery not as a believer, but as an investigator trained to follow material evidence. His sections give the novel its procedural spine, while his growing awareness that art, religion, intelligence, and power are far more entangled than they appear gives the book much of its momentum.
The novel’s most emotionally compelling character, however, is Jackie McBride, the former Maryknoll nun and cosmologist whose personal journey mirrors the book’s larger themes. Jackie’s struggle to leave religious life, reclaim her identity, confront addiction, and rethink faith beyond obedience gives the story real emotional grounding. She is not merely a convenient scholar-character; she is a woman trying to understand what truth means when institutions that claim spiritual authority also silence, control, and conceal. Her dynamic with Nic Panama adds warmth, friction, humour, and emotional vulnerability to a narrative that might otherwise have remained purely intellectual.
Author Lysaght’s greatest strength is his scope. The book is packed with fascinating material: Our Lady of Fatima, Lady Fatima in Islamic tradition, Mushaf Fatimah, the Miracle of the Spinning Sun, Vatican secrecy, Renaissance tiraz inscriptions, the role of Arabic calligraphy in Christian art, Mount Sinai, St. Catherine’s Monastery, the Vatican Observatory, UAP activity, Mars imagery, the Blue Army, the Knights of Malta, and Cold War-era secrecy. The result is a novel that feels less like a straightforward thriller and more like a speculative theological dossier disguised as fiction.
That ambition is also the book’s challenge. The Fatima File is heavily expository in places. Characters often explain history, theology, astronomy, and geopolitical theory at length, and readers looking for a lean, fast-paced Dan Brown-style thriller may find the intellectual weight demanding. The narrative sometimes pauses for argument more than action. However, for readers who enjoy conspiracy fiction with theological depth, archival mystery, historical speculation, and big metaphysical questions, this density will be part of the appeal.
What I appreciated most is that the novel is not simply anti-religion or pro-religion. Its real target is institutional control: the suppression of knowledge, the manipulation of belief, and the way powerful systems protect themselves by defining what the public is allowed to know. The book is interested in revelation, not as a divine message, but as disclosure, recognition, and the courage to look at reality without inherited filters.
Overall, The Fatima File is a bold, complex, and intellectually provocative thriller. It is not a light read, and it asks a great deal of attention from the reader, but it rewards that attention with a rich web of ideas and a genuinely unusual premise. Author Lysaght has written a novel for readers who enjoy religious mystery, Vatican intrigue, interfaith symbolism, historical puzzles, and speculative questions about humanity’s spiritual future.