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"Terry Hooper's father - Quaker-raised, Yale-educated, a sometime poet, now a retired (is he?) State Department veteran - was, in the 1950s, the C.I.A. station chief in Kurash, a small, newly constituted Middle Eastern country, a country caught in the grip of cold war politics, a country of beautiful and frightening Otherness (Arab women hidden behind their veils, scar-faced men on horseback with curved sabers, and streets that melted in the heat), 90 percent Muslim, lodged like a walnut between Syria and Iraq. Mack Hooper's assignment: to win the confidence of the King of Kurash, an enigmatic, British-educated desert aristocrat to whom no one, not even the U.S. Ambassador, has been able to get close." "In a narrative that moves backward and forward in time, Terry puts together the pieces of the puzzle that has haunted him. Is his father a good man? Was he a friend to the young King, or a diplomat-seducer sent to betray him?"--BOOK JACKET.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Cold War, Fathers and sons, Fiction, Boston (mass.), fiction, Fiction, thrillers, general, Fiction, espionage, Middle east, fiction, Fiction, political, Fiction, suspense, Fiction, thrillers, espionage, Fathers and sons, fiction, Diplomats, United States. Central Intelligence AgencyPlaces
Boston (Mass.), Middle EastShowing 4 featured editions. View all 4 editions?
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Book Details
First Sentence
"One summer Saturday morning in 1957, almost five months before the events in question, the front door of a modest, two-story stucco house on P Street, in Georgetown, Washington, D.C., opened wide and out I stepped with my mother and my father."
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- Created April 29, 2008
- 9 revisions
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October 8, 2021 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
April 5, 2014 | Edited by ImportBot | Added IA ID. |
April 27, 2011 | Edited by OCLC Bot | Added OCLC numbers. |
August 5, 2010 | Edited by IdentifierBot | added LibraryThing ID |
April 29, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from amazon.com record. |