From Booklist
Arnold Cartwright is a British aerospace engineer who suddenly finds himself divorced and unemployed. At loose ends, he accepts a job installing a sophisticated radar device on the Mediterranean Sea, ostensibly for the government of Mauritania but, unbeknownst to Cartwright, actually for Saddam Hussein. Or is it? Is Cartwright, in fact, really the pawn of U.S. intelligence, which wants Hussein to believe he has a chance to win the Gulf War? This is a multitextured, carefully nuanced novel featuring an interesting cast of characters who behave both bravely and from the basest of motives. The novel presents a completely different spin on the Gulf War, viewing many of the issues from an Iraqi viewpoint that was never represented in mainstream American media. Since everyone reading the novel knows how the war ended, Rathbone builds his suspense on the engineer's obsession with solving the problem, regardless of the employer. One complaint: Rathbone can't write American dialect. The slang and sentence structure of his American spies, soldiers, and politicians are laughably bad. Overlook this flaw, though, and you'll find a solid suspense novel from a rising talent.
George Needham
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From Kirkus Reviews
The newest political thriller from a seasoned writer of the genre is almost there: intelligent, challenging, complex--but never quite believable. Arnold Cartwright, perhaps the most brilliant radar technician in the world, and certainly in his native England, has just been sacked. Bitter and reeling from a failed marriage, he takes a job in Spain, updating the latest radar technology for--Ecuador? By the time he comes to realize that he is actually working for Iraq, he has been drawn so deeply into the plot to annex Kuwait that he is not even sure himself if he wants out. Around Cartwright, Rathbone (Lying in State, 1986, etc.) weaves a net of international politics so intricate that following its convolutions can often be as aggravating as it is engrossing. Save for the one woman who suspects the truth, the US Pentagon intelligence people who, behind the scenes, machinate the build-up to the Gulf War are at best a bunch of racist sexists and at worst--surprise!--murderers, albeit, of course, indirectly and always from thousands of miles away. The Iraqi side of the story comes from glimpses into the secret diary of Salih KÄÄ, an academic who has been unwillingly drawn into Saddam Hussein's inner circle by virtue of his grasp of the subtleties of the English language, and whose amusing reflections on what he has seen there are often dangerously less than flattering. Perhaps the most discordant note in the plot is Roma, the Palestinian terrorist who improbably seduces Cartwright for the sake of the Arab Nation, and then even more improbably seems to soften, nursing him back to health and leaving him to be rescued by American soldiers. Despite the sometimes herky-jerky nature of the plot, the political minuets are danced superbly--they're what you read the book for, and they make you think. --
Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--Ce texte provient de la
Paperback
édition.