From Publishers Weekly
Veteran foreign correspondent Fesperman taps another timely issue in his fourth topical thriller, zeroing in on the secretive U.S.-operated prison camp for possible terrorists at Guantánamo Bay. The action follows the downfall of translator Revere Falk, an FBI interrogator whose Arabic language skills have put him in high demand and, unfortunately, directly in the line of fire between competing political forces. Falk has been focusing on a Yemeni prisoner with murky links to al-Qaeda, but his questioning sessions get interrupted when the body of an American soldier washes ashore in nearby Cuban territory. Falk is assigned to the investigation, but it quickly becomes apparent that base commanders as well as military higher-ups in Washington, D.C., simply want a quick whitewash job. Falk, however, has already asked too many nosy questions and finds himself cast as a possible scapegoat for a variety of other misdeeds at Gitmo. Despite an occasionally confusing plot and a finale with little punch, Fesperman (
The Warlord's Son) does a superb job of explaining the inner workings at Guantánamo, as well as the context for the public outcry about the base.
(July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
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.