Monday, June 11, 2007

Today's Topic

And you were upset ...
Preventive Maintenance


Nancy Pelosi  is kept on as the new Islamo government's "Show Snatch." (Their words).
If I was going to write a novel about Islamo betrayal and takeover of the United States, I too would make Seattle the capitol city of the new Blue State union.  I'd not heard about the book Prayers for the Assassin: until Chuck commented on it, but it looks good - maybe even prescient.  Here's a review by Joanne Wilkinson

In a huge departure from his edgy thrillers set in the glittering wasteland of contemporary L.A. (Flinch, 2001; The Wake-Up, 2004), Ferrigno sets his ninth novel in the year 2040. The U.S. has been rent by civil strife and a nuclear attack that leveled New York and Washington, D.C. The nation is now divided into the Islamic States of America, whose capital is in Seattle, and the Bible Belt, located in the South. Young and fearless researcher Sarah Dougan, a moderate Muslim who frequently chafes at the restrictions placed on women, discovers that the nuke attacks long blamed on Israel were in fact carried out by a fanatical Muslim billionaire who intends to take over the nation by launching an unprecedented attack on the Christian South.

Intending to verify her explosive findings, Sarah must go into hiding, where she is joined by her lover, former elite Muslim warrior Rakkim Epps. The two zigzag their way across an unrecognizable U.S., dogged by a psychopathic rogue assassin named Darwin. Ferrigno deserves props for his imaginative portrayal of a futuristic America, which is often highlighted through startling details, as when the second half of the Super Bowl must wait on midday prayers. But his new novel lacks his usual edge and his signature dialogue. Still, with its inventive setting and violent, action-packed, even controversial storyline, this novel should have no trouble finding an audience.


6 comments:

Anonymous said...

What would you do w/o me?

Anonymous said...

I love your idea of "Preventive Maintenance". But why stop at Seattle, when the west coast is ripe with Muslim/Leftist targets?

Linda Sue O'Grady said...

Read it already. It kinda sorta sucked. big time.

Linda Sue O'Grady said...

I'm sorry Rodger, I should have been a bit more specific.

What made the book suck was that the "hero" kept getting himself into these impossible situations, and then suddenly the author reveals that he has some amazing hidden talent that no one knew he had to get him out of the situation.

The final Super Bowl scene was nothing less than ridiculous.

I shook my head through most of the book and when it was done, I wished I hadn't wasted my time.

I found the book in the lobby of my office building with a sticker on it that said "read me, I'm free" so I read it.

My only comfort was that I didn't pay for it and when I was done, I returned it to where I found it.

Anonymous said...

I read it and enjoyed the main character Rakkim and his adversary. The end was a big letdown, but hell it's a fast read.

Rodger the Real King of France said...

Okay, I guess this book is the equivalent of the Arnold Schwarzenegger-Danny DeVito movie "TWINS." Killer premise gone bad.

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