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An April 25th posting from Louise Crawford, award-wining author: J. M. Taylor's political thriller shows clear knowledge of Iraq and its neighbors, the danger and fear of living under constant threat of death, and what that does to a person, or a culture - a culture shown in vivid technicolor through the eyes of the main character, U.S. soldier Nash Devon. . . From day one, when Devon is saved from a firing squad, to the end, he faces life and death drama, rescuing his co-workers, sometimes winning, sometimes losing and sometimes losing track of his goal. . . Taylor does a masterful job of dragging the reader into a world of extremes, through grassy fields laced with mine where a wandering goat or child is readily blown apart, into the rubble-strewn streets of Baghdad, and into villages where friend and foe are indistinguishable until guns are waving and bullets are blasting... If you haven't read this book, and you like action/adventure/thrillers, check out this book!
James Able, lawyer, author and literary teacher: I thought the book was great! I'm not that militarily literate (mine was "basic grunt, c. 1950, Korea") but, what I do know, it sure struck me as dead on target. Literately, I can't find a thing to criticize, plotwise, presentation, or anything. It kept me totally immersed until the end. In all, I think it's a damned fine book and think it should sell well.
--This text refers to the Kindle Edition edition.Behind the Green Water is an adventure, a romance, a political and cultural shocker, in the sense that the reader can feel at home or uncomfortable, as the case may be with the people, customs, conflicts and lands of the Middle East.
The settings are accurate. The behaviors are all too realistic. Ask anyone who has been there. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Timely Thriller,
By Ann T. Cook (Temple Terrace, Florida United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Behind the Green Water (Paperback)
I have never thought of myself as a thriller fan, but the timely Middle East setting of Behind the Green Water and its fast pace captured my interest from the beginning. The protagonist Nash Devon, an American military officer, is complex, believable, and unlike many inflexible and unfeeling male characters, has heart. The back story comes forth gradually, supplying his motivation and creating his sympathetic personality. The novel satisfies our curiosity in particular about Iraq and reveals why this nation is potentially so dangerous. Yet we also meet some admirable Iraqi people and kind, if often discouraged, United Nations refugee workers. The author clearly has experience with the culture, towns, and countryside of Iraq, as well as Syria and Saudi Arabia, and convincingly describes the military environment and hardware. The intrique Devon confronts rings true, as well. Surprisingly, the novel develops an undercurrent of spirituality that relates to the title. Devon is on a cruelly difficult mission. Few will be able to set the book aside without knowing if he is successful, and few will be able to stop reading until they know whether Devon and the woman and boy he befriends can all escape their enemies.
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