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Loading... The Unknown Terroristby Richard Flanagan
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Disapointing. I expect more of this author. ( )Infuriatingly stupid book that relies upon its protagonist, who had a one night stand with a man who turned out to be a terrorist, making one stupid decision after another to keep the plot going. Flanagan insults his readers intelligence time and time again. There are good points to be made about post-911 paranoia, but Flanagan isn't the writer capable of making them. As a novel, The Unknown Terrorist lacks the certain something. It starts out fast and hard but looses all that speed somewhere in the middle of it and ends poorly (and very predictable). Instead, the book does a good job painting a world after 9/11 in which people live in constant fear of further terrorist attacks in their neigborhoods. The author takes this view to the next level and describes a world - or rather a continent - where the government stirs this fear on purpose, where the media is (ab)used to spread misinformation as long as it helps to distract the people from other issues while running the risk of recklessly ruining the lives of inoccent peoples. Interesting topic, maybe there's even some truth behind it, but not my kind of book. Gina Davies, aka 'The Doll' is a pole dancer from Sydney, who yearns for a better life for herself. To The Doll, all that matters is the pursuit of money and all the pleasures that it can being (such as designer clothes, accessories etc.). One night, The Doll has a one night stand with a stranger named Tariq, who has disappeared by morning. At around the same time, three unexploded bombs are discovered, and Gina discovers that Tariq is a suspected terrorist...and as someone who has been seen with him, she finds herself a suspected terrorist (the 'unknown terrorist' of the title). The Doll goes on the run, while around her the media whips Sydney into a state of panic about the threat of terrorism. An unsavoury journalist jumps on the bandwagon in an attempt to rescue his own flagging career, and soon the situation becomes a major news story, with Gina as public enemy number one. This book can be enjoyed as a straightforward thriller, but there is a a subtext, showing how the media manipulate people's fears, and how such fears give society justification for vilifying people, with nothing concrete to base their feelings on. Scariest of all was the fact that it is easy to see how such a situation could happen in today's culture of fear. It's a fast moving story (despite taking place over only a few days); the first half however was more enjoyable for me than the second half, which seemed to get a bit bogged down by some overwrought prose. It also felt a little preachy towards the end, but overall this did not detract from the story. I struggled with this book, but perservered, which I was glad of in the end. Gives lots of thought about the role of the media in society. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 19:51:12 -0500)
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