The Trade Mission

by Andrew Pyper

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On the heels of his acclaimed bestselling debut Lost Girls, Andrew Pyper brings his darkly musical language, chilling suspense, and psychological complexity to a story of survival in the Amazon jungle. On the delirious eve of the new millennium, Marcus Wallace and Jonathon Bates, two twenty-four-year-old overnight dot-com millionaires, are on a trade mission in Brazil. Their product is Hypothesys, a virtual morality machine that promises to help people make the best decisions of their lives. show more But when the decision is made to take an ecotour up the Rmo Negro deep into the Amazon jungle, the Hypothesys team members are forced to make choices for themselves -- choices that carry fatal consequences. In the dead of night, their boat is boarded by paramilitaries who kill the Brazilian crew and kidnap Wallace and Bates, their two older colleagues, and their enigmatic interpreter, Crossman. Blindfolded and thrown into a pit for a prison, they must fight to find the will to survive. But when the increasingly unstable Wallace engineers a violent escape, their own natures emerge as a threat potentially more dangerous than the boundless jungle that surrounds them, or the gunmen who relentlessly pursue them. A rare combination of literary skill, contemporary insight, and outstanding storytelling, The Trade Mission is an electrifying read that confirms Andrew Pyper's mastery of psychological suspense. show less

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Cecilturtle L'une des trames narratives de Là où les tigres sont chez eux entre tout à fait dans le ton de ce roman, y compris les pratiques des tribus amazoniennes.

Member Reviews

6 reviews
I always enjoy Pyper's thrillers which he carefully constructs, building suspense and planting questions and discomfort as the plot progresses. This story happens in the heart of the Amazonian jungle. A series of careless secrets, happenstances and unlucky decisions bring five Western characters in an inextricable situation. The story is most interesting for its tone: sometimes told from an omniscient point of view, sometimes from that of the translator and other times addressing the reader directly. This mixes the truths, and the reader cannot quite rely on what he reads. Who are the bad guys, the traitors? Who causes what? This clever ploy keeps the plot moving despite the sometimes long lulls in action and scenery.
The main show more characters, Bates and Wallace, are compelling, although their relationship could have been more explicitly developed. The others are good foils, each with their secrets and interests.
This novel is not as unnerving as Lost Girls, but it does make for a good thriller.
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½
Think you want to go on one of those trips up the Amazon river into the rain forest. This book may make you think twice!

Elizabeth Crossman is an almost-40 underemployed Ph.D. who happens to speak Portuguese. When she is asked by two young software developers to accompany them as a translater on a trip to Brazil to sell their Hypotheses program, she jumps at the chance. Wallace and Bates have developed a program which helps people make difficult ethical choices. After the trade show is over, the team, which includes an American publicity man and an English lawyer, goes on a trip up the Rio Negre. Their trip starts in Manaus where the men spend the evening in a brothel. Bates tells his girl that they have developed a perfect bomb because show more he is tired of talking about the software program. On the river one night their boat is boarded by Spanish speaking bandits. The boat's crew is killed and the Hypotheses team is taken into the jungle. They are kept in a hole in the ground and taken out in turns to be tortured. The bandits want the plans for the bomb. Wallace manages to disarm and kill one of the bandits and free the others. But that is not the end of their problems.

The writing is so detailed that you feel like you are experiencing everything with Crossman. Some (many) of the details are horrifying so this is not an easy book to read. At the same time, I found it hard to put down. Although this book is not for the faint of heart I would recommend it highly.
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Elizabeth Crossman has a doctorate, but hasn't been able to find a teaching job, even at a second or third tier university. She finds herself living in a basement apartment in Toronto getting by on translating jobs; she speaks Portuguese. In The Trade Mission she is hired by a software company to accompany them to Brazil as part of a trade delegation from Canada. After the show, she goes with the four founders of the company on an eco-tour, first to the Amazonas city of Manaus, then on a five-day boat trip up the Rio Negro. It is on the Rio Negro that things go horribly wrong; they are kidnapped, the boat's crew murdered.

There's a lot in this book. Andrew Pyper is known for writing genuinely frightening stuff and the lawless heart of show more the Amazon rain forest up where the borders between the countries blur and where illegal activity is almost a given is a great setting. There's a mix of Western eco-tourists, anthropologists, illegal gold miners, indigenous peoples, pirates and criminals as well as the honest people just trying to get by. Crossman is about as well prepared to survive in a jungle environment as anyone who has spent her life living in the world of academe. That said, the final pages of the novel don't quite hang together as well as they might. show less
Uninteresting characters, and that spoils any book for me.
Strange and slightly surreal.
½
Reviewed by PB. He thought it was an excellent thriller. Full review: http://www.canadianauthors.net/p/pyper_andrew/trade_mission_the.php

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20+ Works 3,102 Members
Andrew Pyper was born in Stratford, Ontario, in 1968. He received a B.A. and an M.A. in English Literature from McGill University in Montreal, as well as a law degree from the University of Toronto, although he has never practiced. Kiss Me, his first book of short stories, was published to in 1996. Pyper the went on to the position of show more Writer-in-Residence at Berton House, Dawson City, Yukon, as well as at Champlain College, Trent University. His first novel, Lost Girls, was a national bestseller in Canada and a Globe and Mail Notable Book selection in 1999 as well as a Notable Book selection in the New York Times Book Review and the London Evening Standard in 2000. Lost Girls won the Arthur Ellis Award for Best First Novel. Pyper's second novel, The Trade Mission, was published in 2002, and was selected by The Toronto Star as one of the Best Books of the Year. Outside of fiction writing, Pyper is a regular contributor of essays and criticism to Canadian magazines and newspapers, including The Globe and Mail, Ottawa Citizen, Quill & Quire and Saturday Night. He is also a Contributing Editor for Gear magazine. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Original title
The Trade Mission
Original publication date
2002 (Canada, UK) (Canada, UK); 2003 (US) (US)
People/Characters*
Marcus Wallace; Jonathon Bates; Barry; Lydia; Elizabeth Crossman; Americo (show all 7); Maria
Important places
Brazil; Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dedication
For Leonardo
First words
They are only boys.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Two widening shadows that desire nothing less than the world.
Original language
English
Disambiguation notice
The Trade Mission was republished as Dark Descent
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Suspense & Thriller, Horror
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PR9199.3 .P96 .T73Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish LiteratureEnglish literature: Provincial, local, etc.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
108
Popularity
300,210
Reviews
6
Rating
(3.06)
Languages
Dutch, English, German
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
14
ASINs
3