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Spy Silences Israel

Where Is Gabriel Allon? Daniel Silva’s New Novel Erases Israel and Leaves Jewish Fans Disappointed 

Bestselling author Daniel Silva faces criticism from Jewish readers as his latest Gabriel Allon novel completely removes references to Israel, marking a dramatic shift in the series.

4 min read
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Daniel Silva and his books
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For more than two decades, best-selling author Daniel Silva earned the admiration of Jewish readers around the world with his celebrated thriller series centered on Gabriel Allon, an Israeli intelligence operative who also moonlights as an art restorer. Allon, both fierce and introspective, was more than just a fictional spy; he became a symbol of Jewish resilience and Israeli pride.

But something has shifted.

Since the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel, Silva’s literary world has taken a sharp turn. Allon has quietly retired from espionage, and more notably, the word “Israel” has vanished entirely from Silva’s new books. The once beloved character’s Israeli identity, so deeply woven into the plotlines and emotional fabric of the series, has been erased, leaving many Jewish fans bewildered and, increasingly, disillusioned.

A Departure from the Past

In a 2015 interview with NPR, Silva acknowledged the political sensitivity of his protagonist’s identity: "Having an Israeli character is obviously a double-edged sword. Israel is extremely unpopular in the world right now... People ask me this all the time: 'Well, when Gabriel says this, is that what you think?' ...And the answer is no, not necessarily. They are who they are. You know, [The Silence of the Lambs author] Thomas Harris wrote books about a character that liked to eat people and I am not sure that anyone ever asked Thomas Harris, you know, 'Do you like to eat people?'"

Yet despite those challenges, Silva remained steadfast in telling stories centered around the Mossad operative, until now.

Traditionally, Silva releases a new Gabriel Allon novel every July. Last year, following the devastating Hamas massacre, many readers anticipated a story that would reflect the shifting geopolitical landscape, or at the very least, acknowledge the emotional weight of the attack. It didn’t happen then. Now, nearly two years later, fans say the latest novel, “An Inside Job,” offers not only silence but erasure.

"Israel" Removed, Identity Erased

In a piece for The Times of Israel, journalist Nadine Bonner expressed the growing frustration among Silva’s readership: “To my shock, in this year’s book, An Inside Job, the courageous spy who tracked down and assassinated the murderers of the 1972 Israeli Olympic team does not even have the Jewish state on his mind. Whenever Silva mentions Allon’s previous career as a spy, he pointedly omits that the country he spied for was Israel. There are no references to his former Israeli colleagues, who previously accompanied him in missions outside Israel. The word ‘Israel’ does not appear anywhere in the book or on the jacket flap, as it has in previous years.”

In An Inside Job, Allon is found assisting the Pope and defending the Church, not the people he once served. His Jewish identity, once central to the saga, is now conspicuously absent.

For readers who have followed Gabriel Allon since his first appearance in The Kill Artist, this shift is more than literary evolution: it feels like abandonment.

Once a Passionate Voice for Zionism

Silva has, in the past, spoken passionately about his connection to Israel and Jewish history. In a historic interview about his novel Prince of Fire, he shared:

“I’ve always been captivated by the history of Zionism and the conflict between Arabs and Jews in Palestine. The notion that history and Providence has thrown these two remarkable peoples together in this tiny slice of land and bound them in bloodshed. As a writer of fiction, there is a deep well from which to draw: fascinating characters, a compelling and violent history, and a starkly beautiful physical landscape. And, of course, it is a conflict that affects us all.”

He also added, emphatically: “I believe that Jews have a right to a homeland.”

But when that homeland was under unprecedented attack, with its citizens brutalized and its future shaken, Gabriel Allon was nowhere to be found. And Daniel Silva, many feel, chose silence over solidarity.

A Vanishing Hero

The disappointment among Silva’s longtime Jewish readers is profound. Not because fiction must echo real-world tragedies in real-time, but because a character who once stood for Israel now seems to have distanced himself entirely from it. In doing so, Silva risks losing not just a core element of his stories, but the trust of a community that once felt seen in them.

Where is Gabriel Allon now, when his people need him most? Apparently, he’s busy helping the Vatican.


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