Elder of Ziyon
I've rarely reviewed works of fiction here, but The Eyes of Abel, by Daniel Jacobs, is worth reading.
Set in the very near future, The Eyes of Abel starts off with a
terror attack on a plane over San Francisco, where the terrorist sneaks
the bomb aboard while wearing a burka. While most Americans are upset
at the political correctness that allowed the authorities to let her
board without proper security checks, liberal Pulitzer-winning
journalist Roger Charlin is more concerned that profiling Middle
Eastern-looking people at airports would create many more terrorists. To
prove his assumption, he pretends to be an Arab and tries to get past
El Al security in a New York airport, which is where he meets agent Maya
Cohen, a (naturally) beautiful and brilliant agent who sees through his
disguise and more.
The plot is relatively typical of the genre. The Eyes of Abel follows
the pair as they fall in love and then work to save the world from an
impending war centered on Israel but really planned by an alignment of
big energy players and the politicians who are in their pockets.
Yes, it is somewhat formulaic. Yes, you have to suspend disbelief a bit.
(Charlin manages to go through three months of the narrative without
seeming to file a single story.)
But that doesn't mean that the book doesn't work, and it is difficult to
put down once you start. Luckily, it is pretty short - less than 200
pages - so you can finish it in an afternoon.
What is most appealing, however, is that while the book works well as a
Dan Brown-lite type of thriller, it also discusses the thorniest points
of the Arab-Israeli conflict in a refreshingly honest way. Charlin and
his colleagues are reflexively anti-Israel and Maya does a great job as
she explains Israel's perspective and slowly changes Roger's mind. Media
bias as well as the automatic anti-Israel bias of the world community
is exposed nicely and pretty accurately, without getting in the way of
the story. Plus, as the author emphasized to me, the book exposes the
relationship between petrodollars and the war machines that align
against Israel - and how the decline of the influence of oil could
possibly bring peace.
If you need a good beach read, you can't do much better than The Eyes of Abel. And if you want to ensure that people understand Israel's point of view, you will recommend it to your friends.
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