- Title: "A Most Wanted Man"
- Author: John Le Carre
- Finished: August 25, 2010
- Synopsis: A young Muslim Chechen, Issa, arrives in Germany illegally after escaping from both Sweden and Russia. He befriends a Turkish family and obtains an idealistic young human rights lawyer. Issa is not entirely what he seems because he has large inheritance waiting for him in a private German bank. The intrigue surrounding him brings all parties into an old fashioned spy game mixed with the war on terror.
- Impression of the book: It is pretty clear that Le Carre is trying to make a statement on the American war on terror. He ends up telling the story that makes it difficult to determine the good from the bad. A liberal will probably read the book picturing the "spies" as bad guys while viewing Issa as a misguided victim. I read the book thinking of Issa as a fugitive from the law, so his situation did not really tug at my heart strings. Le Carre has written a story that allows for a lot of interpretation, and he does it in very compelling way.
- Read Again Scale: 3
- I enjoyed this book a great deal, but it is not the kind of book that I typically read again. This is especially true if I am able to use the "Read & Return" option from the Paradies Shops in the airport.
- Read Another Book by the Same Author: 7
- If I encounter same situation while traveling, I would be willing to read Le Carre again. However, I won't search him out at the library.
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