From Publishers Weekly:
In this powerful action novel based on Foley's travels through wartime Bosnia, protagonist Robert Jackson is an American gun smuggler trying to do the right thing in a conflict in which almost everyoneDSerbs, Croats and the indifferent WestDseems to be in the wrong. Jackson's smuggling operation makes him a criminal in the eyes of the UN, in whose military force he once served. The U.S. turns its back on him, too, preventing him from ever returning home to be with his fianc e, Maria. Trapped in Eastern Europe, he concentrates on providing Bosnian Muslims with the arms they sorely need, aided financially by Israeli diplomat Abram Katz. Jackson's breathless adventures begin when Katz sets him up with assassin Samuel West, who is on a mission to end the war and needs Jackson to guide him into Serbian territory. With his colorful partner Zarko, Jackson leads West north into the jet black heart of ethnic hatred and uninhibited barbarity, which Foley unflinchingly documents. From the relatively safe haven of Dubrovnik, the three journey farther inland to villages under bombardment, now effectively Muslim ghettos. The residents are either slaughtered or forcibly taken, as Jackson and West are, to Serbian concentration camps like Omarska, where women are raped and men brutally tortured before being killed. While employing his considerable narrative powers to manipulate multiple plotlines, Foley objectively presents the Balkans' political and historical complexities, slipping behind the Maginot line of statistics and political spin to make plain the terrible human suffering of the men, women and children afflicted by the conflict. (July)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Kirkus Reviews:
A young American soldier lives a nightmare in this brutal story set in war-torn Bosnia. On duty with the UN peace-keeping forces, Lieutenant Robert Jackson commits an essentially decent but drastically illegal act that changes his life forever. He deserts--out of empathy for a people who, he feels, have been betrayed: no weapons, no help of any kind from any source offered the beleaguered Bosnian Muslims, who thus face the marauding Serbs (and "ethnic cleansing"): broomsticks vs. tanks. It's Jackson's meeting with the heroic guerrilla fighter Aleksandar that leads directly to nonstop confrontations with atrocities he can't bear to turn his back on. With Aleksandar's help, he becomes an accomplished gunrunner. Eventually, however, the Serbs catch him and send him to a Dachau-like death camp where escalating horrors are grimly and graphically detailed. Second-novelist Foley (Measuring Lives, 1996) depicts man's inhumanity to man as so pervasive, so ingrained, that the only viable reactions are disbelief or despair. Too much of a bad thing. -- Copyright © 2000 Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.