Reem is twenty, bright and strikingly attractive. Nick is twenty-seven and determined to do what he can to make the world a better place. But when they meet in a fashionable bar it is certainly no accident. For Reem has completed her training as a so-called terrorist - under the tutelage of the mysterious Ustaz, or teacher, and Nicholas Lorimer is her first assignment. It is Nick's first posting abroad. The UN has sent him to Beirut to help trace thousands of Lebanese missing during the country's civil war and Nick has what Reem needs; access out of the city's besieged western sector into the mainly Christian east, and to a notorious rightwing warlord with his sights set on the country's presidency. The Ustaz wants El-Hami killed before he aligns the Arab country with the United States and Israel, plunging the entire region into turmoil. For Reem, the fight is personal. She has lost her family and home. She volunteers for the ultimate mission - an Operation of Quality. A suicide attack. Nick's love for Reem explodes the bubble of foreignness that has kept him unscathed by the war. Once he realises the truth, he must choose between Reem and what his contacts at the British embassy insist is his duty. Fullerton's third novel is a tough, fast-paced thriller. It is also a moving account of what happens to ordinary people in the face of overwhelming force. Praise for "A Hostile Place": 'Harsh, cold-eyed thriller, absolutely the antithesis of a flag-waver ...Fullerton puts the politics on hold and tells his story with heart, guts and go. A brilliant performance, with a fierce, uncosy intelligence setting off the fireworks'. - "Literary Review".
John Fullerton is the author of five novels and six books. A former Reuters journalist, he has worked in 38 countries and covered a dozen wars in Africa, Asia, the Balkans and the Middle East. He was born in the UK but attended boarding school in South Africa where he first started work on a local newspaper during the apartheid era. He is married with two children and divides his time between Britain and southeast Asia.
His books include: The Soviet occupation of Afghanistan, The Monkey House, Clap (pseudonymous), A Hostile Place, Give Me Death/This Green Land and White Boys Don't Cry.
