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The Prisoner of Guantánamo
 
 
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The Prisoner of Guantánamo [Audiobook, CD, Unabridged] [Audio CD]

Dan Fesperman (Author), David Colacci (Reader)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Book Description

July 11, 2006
Revere Falk - FBI veteran, Arabic speaker - is an interrogator at “Gitmo,” assigned to a “hold-out,” a Yemeni prisoner who may have valuable information about al Qaeda. But these duties are temporarily suspended when the body of an American soldier is found washed ashore in Cuban territory. No American has ever turned up dead on the wrong side of the fence before. Suddenly, Cold War tension is back and Falk finds himself at the heart of it when he’s put in charge of the investigation into the death. Almost immediately he senses an unusual level of interest in the proceedings: from his commander, from the Cubans, and from the various factions of the military. And when the Defense Intelligence Agency unexpectedly sends its own team to “reinforce” the investigation, Falk understands that there is much more at stake than anybody is willing to say. Now, he is drawn into a game of evasion and pursuit, a game whose stakes spike dangerously when a figure from his past reappears - someone who knows secrets about him that he had hoped were buried forever.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Talk about "ripped from today's headlines"—this exciting and moving audio version of a veteran Baltimore Sun foreign correspondent's incredibly timely thriller still has hot ink and sound bytes emanating from it. Although Fesperman set his book at Guantánamo in 2003 after spending some time there, and presumably finished it months before the current outrage about the former military base now serving as a holding unit for suspected terrorists, it reads and sounds—thanks to a cool, ironic and subtly impassioned performance by Colacci—like an Internet news feed. A very young Yemeni prisoner disappears, other prisoners kill themselves and brutal examiners justify their extreme behavior by scoffing at the Geneva Conventions. Colacci brings a large cast to life, starting with FBI interrogator and Arabic speaker Revere Falk, and manages to make Falk's so-called friends and security colleagues as equivocal as they come without breaking a sweat. Even the Cubans—who play a surprising role in the story—come across as a varied group. The only problem with playing this in a car is listeners might think they've turned on NPR by mistake.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Bookmarks Magazine

Dan Fesperman, who researched hundreds of documents and visited Gitmo in 2003, definitely did his homework, and it paid off. Critics uniformly praised the meticulous research that allowed the writer to paint a vivid picture of life at Guantánamo Bay, the United States' troubled history with Cuba, and some of the moral quandaries the U.S. faces in its war on terror. That's the good part. However, as a thriller, many reviewers felt Prisoner came out short; they complained about hackneyed, spy-thriller clichés and an anticlimactic ending. And some of the same critics who enjoyed Fesperman's journalistic perspective would have liked to have seen him delve more deeply into the controversy surrounding the military's interrogation techniques at the detention center. So the book is topical but not topical enough and a thriller that's not quite thrilling.

Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


Product Details

  • Audio CD
  • Publisher: Brilliance Audio on CD Unabridged; Unabridged edition (July 11, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1423317742
  • ISBN-13: 978-1423317746
  • Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 5.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,430,234 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (17 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars TIMELY TOPIC - ON TARGET READING, July 23, 2006
This review is from: The Prisoner of Guantánamo (Audio CD)

Baltimore Sun Reporter Dan Fesperman is not only a terrific newsman but a first-rate novelist as well (The Small Boat of Great Sorrows, The Warlord's Son). His stories are as current as this morning's news and while sometimes troubling also thoroughly entertaining.

Our setting is the Guantanamo base or Gitmo, the military originated slang name for this outpost. Gitmo,, as the world knows, is where suspected terrorists are incarcerated and interrogated. Life here doesn't amount to much as the suicide rate makes clear. "There had been five attempts inside the wire in the last two weeks, none successful and more than thirty since the prisoners first arrived."

Revere Falk is a former FBI agent now an interrogator at Gitmo. He qualified for this posting because of his fluency in Arabic, and his desire to keep some secrets in his past. For company he has found a career military woman who shares his assignment.

Routine changes when the body of an American soldier, a reservist who was assigned to Guantanamo, is found on a Cuban beach. It's not long into Falk's investigation of this death before he realizes that what he had hoped to keep secret may be revealed.

There a lot of action, much political maneuvering, and a wrenching picture of what can happen during the war on terror to be found in The Prisoner of Guantanamo plus, in this case, a riveting reading delivered by actor David Colacci.

Highly recommended.

- Gail Cooke
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Seeing Guantanamo behind the veil, October 20, 2006
Read this book. If you're absolutely convinced the US government is systematically torturing detainees at Gitmo, you won't like the book. The villains will satisfy, because they're representative of the conservative crazies in Washington, but the real way the camps work is the way the protagonist does it. Fesperman does play up the interagency conflict, without communicating that FBI, CIA and military intel folks are looking for different things, and perhaps for artistic purposes doesn't explain that the "other agencies" are minority parts of the real picture.

Read this book. Remember that it's a novel, with a fiction plot played out against a background that is absolutely true to life. The spies and wingnuts and crimes make a good story. The writing style may be disconcerting, the plot is convoluted, the final resolution isn't entirely clean or satisfying, but the book is well worth reading.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars timely deep look at Guantomino Bay, July 12, 2006
The FBI sends Agent Revere Falk to Guantomino Bay as an Arabic translator since he is proficient in communicating in that language. His specific assignment involves a Yemeni prisoner Adnan with questionable ties to al-Qaeda. However, his efforts to break Adnan halts at least for now when the corpse of an American NCO washes onto beach on the Cuban side of the barrier.

Falk is assigned to investigate the death of the reservist sergeant. He quickly learns the victim had been a Michigan banker in his civilian life, but was recently receiving letters from his family involving Cayman Island financial institutions. Pressure mounts on Falk to finish immediately as the military wants this incident to go away. Other demands also rise from a surprising local source that knows of Falk's indiscretions as a young marine years ago. Though he keeps digging, hints of culpability are tossed at him like Improvised Explosive Devices as someone like him must take the fall; rank has its privileges nor will it be those connected.

This is a terrific thriller that provides readers with an insightful look at Gitmo from what seems an insider's perspective. The descriptions are so detailed and powerful Cheney will probably accuse Dan Fesperman of abetting the enemy. However that depth also at times overwhelms the prime investigation plot as the fascination with the prison is the star draw. Fans will appreciate this deep look at Guantomino Bay inside a fine whodunit or perhaps better said is a fine whodunit inside a deep prison tour.

Harriet Klausner
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Van Meter, Camp Delta, Tiki Bar, Ted Bokamper, Coast Guard, Deer Isle, Windmill Beach, Camp Echo, General Trabert, United States, Camp America, Revere Falk, Little Havana, Sergeant Ludwig, Captain Lewis, Joint Task Force, North East Gate, General Cabral, Farmers Federal, Camp Iguana, Pam Cobb, Pink Palace, Marine Corps, Camp Three, Perhaps Falk
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