As America’s most infamous former Secretary of Defense lies poised to unleash his wistful recollections and rewriting of the war on terror, authors Eric Martin and Stephen Elliott humbly submit their take to the historical record: Donald.
What would happen if Donald Rumsfeld, former defense secretary and architect of the war on terror, was abducted at night from his Maryland home, held without charges in his own prison system, denied a trial, and kept in a place where no one could find him, beyond the reach of the law? Donald is a high-wire allegory that answers this question, in equal parts breakneck thriller and gradual descent into madness. But it is also a novel rooted in the harrowing stories of real people caught in America’s military campaigns. And while there are those who would try to convince us that war is full of uncertainty—of knowns and unknowns—Donald reminds us that there remain things we know to be wrong.
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Donald: The Book About Rumsfeld Being Kidnapped and Heavily Interrogated
"Donald, a novel by Eric Martin and Stephen Elliott, comes out today (the same day real-life Rumsfeld's memoir is released) . I'm ordering it just from the blurb...though I could just as easily wait for the inevitable film adaptation:
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Blog Archive
-
▼
2011
(192)
-
▼
February
(11)
- More Apple Stuff...and Why "Social Networking" is ...
- Get Ready to Sell Apple
- Why Egypt Will Turn Out OK (More or Less)
- Future of Moving: Update
- Do We Have Ahmadinejad All Wrong?
- Donald: The Book About Rumsfeld Being Kidnapped an...
- Nuts, Chips, Heineken...and Cancer
- The Things You Hear a Million Times
- Meteorological Optimism
- "Ask FloFab"??
- Keep Safe While Grieving
-
▼
February
(11)
No comments:
Post a Comment