Series: Book 1 in the Quantico series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Thrillers, Lang:en
Summary
This thought-provoking near-future thriller from
bestseller Bear (
Dead Lines) focuses on two young FBI agents: William
Griffin, the son of a legendary FBI lawman, struggles through
training; Fouad Al-Husam, who expects suspicion for his
heritage and Muslim faith, finds himself instead sent on
super-secret missions to the Middle East. Playing a minor
supporting role is their Quantico classmate, Jane Rowland.
When a quiet man with mismatched eyes starts telling certain
fanatics that he can make gene-keyed anthrax to destroy their
hereditary enemies, Griffin and Al-Husam form an unlikely
team, headed by veteran agent Rebecca Rose, to handle the
threat. Bear's near-future science is, as always, eerily
plausible, and while he doesn't stint on sharp criticism of
political infighting and its potential to hinder
antiterrorism efforts, his would-be terrorists become
surprisingly sympathetic as the complex details of their true
plan are slowly (sometimes too slowly) revealed.
(Mar.)
Veteran science-fiction author Bear proves here that he is
as comfortable in the near future as he is centuries or
millennia down the road. Just a handful of years from today,
global terrorism has escalated out of control. In Jerusalem,
a sacred religious site is destroyed. Another attack on U.S.
soil has taken the lives of thousands. New killing
technologies are being developed in secret labs around the
world. America is losing the war on terror. Enter three young
FBI agents, raw recruits whose hunt for an American terrorist
could either save the world or destroy it. This chillingly
plausible story displays Bear's storytelling gifts to their
fullest: his ability to extrapolate from current technologies
and political trends; his knack for creating flesh-and-bone
characters; his capacity for keeping us on the edges of our
seats. His legion of fans will be lining up for this one, and
the novel's cross-genre appeal should guarantee it an even
wider readership than usual.
David Pitt
From Publishers Weekly
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