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The Poet Game [Paperback]

Salar Abdoh


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Book Description

April 2001

In the wake of the bombing of the World Trade Center, New York is Ground Zero for an intricate web of betrayals and double crosses in the shadowy world of Islamic radicalism. Sami Amir arrives in Brooklyn via Iran, and enters a universe of militants, spies, and arms suppliers. Unsure of his true purpose, he is sent into New York to investigate dark rumours of terrorist plots set to erupt in Times Square on New Year's Eve, just two weeks away . . .

Critics pronounced the spy novel dead after the fall of the Berlin Wall: The Poet Game shows that it is alive, well, and living in Manhattan.

--This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Review

Critics pronounced the spy novel dead after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The Poet Game shows that it is alive, well and living in Manhattan. -- Eoin McNamee

Like a ventriloquist manipulating the stylish thrillers of Graham Greene or John Le Carre, Abdoh tells a brilliant, dark tale. -- Harper's Bazaar

Ornate and ambitious... A complex, politically sophisticated story. -- New York Times Book Review

The spy novel is given fresh legs with this thriller about New York-based Muslim radicals, arms dealers and an Iranian double agent. -- Daily Mirror, 6 July 2002

this complex, cinematic story... is now being hailed as one of the hottest fictional arrivals of the season... Abdoh is certainly a writer to watch. -- The Times, 10 July 2002 --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

About the Author

Salar Abdoh was born in Iran and attended Wellington School in Somerset for a short time. His father was a wealthy and prominent cultural figure but at the time of the revolution in Iran, Salar's father became a target for Islamic fundamentalists and faced execution if he remained in Iran. So, with his father and two brothers, Salar fled for the US at the age of 14. Within six months of reaching the States, Abdoh's father died, leaving Abdoh and his two brothers homeless in Los Angeles. The boys travelled through the US visiting New Orleans, Pennsylvania, the Bay Area and New York. Eventually, Salar received his diploma and went to Berkeley to study Near Eastern History and Literature.$$$Upon graduating, he spent some time working with his older brother, the well-known Iranian avant-garde playwright and director Reza Abdoh. After the death of Reza from AIDS in 1995, Salar Abdoh got his Masters degree in Creative Writing at City University in New York. He now teaches at the same University and lives in New York City.$$$The Poet Game, written in 1999, the tale of Islamic fundamentalists planning an attack on the World Trade Center, is Salar Abdoh's first novel and was published by Faber in July 2002. His second novel Opium was published in 2004. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.7 out of 5 stars  22 reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars thoughtfull and intelligent thriller 2 Mar 2000
By Robert J. Rabel - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
In the Poet Game, Sami Amir is an Iranian spy caught between the powers-that-be in Iran, employees of the Libyan government, and United States intelligence services. Everywhere he turns he confronts liars. Though reviewers seem not to have noticed this, the "poet" of the title is a convenient metonym for "liar," as Abdoh spins out his own version of the old Platonic idea that all poets are liars. In this novel all liars are also in their own way poets. Along with "Hunting Down Amanda," "The Poet Game" is the most intelligent thriller to be published in years.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Intelligent, politically accurate, & cunningly crafted 16 Mar 2000
By Edward Myles - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
The use of a character that could straddle two worlds was a brilliant idea by S. Abdoh. Although the Iranian and American political philosophies have been at odds for the last two decades, Sami Amir's character and the suspenseful plot of this novel created surprisingly plausible twist of events. A very enjoyable and politically insightful novel.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliance 19 Oct 2001
By January Dylan - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
You often read the back of a literary thriller and see that, yet once again, the author of the book has been compared to the great John Le Carre or even the greater Graham Greene. Usually I take such comparisons with a grain of salt. But being a fan of the genre, I cannot dismiss such comparisons and end up reading the works, often much to my disappointment. There was no disappointment with The POET GAME. This literary thriller pretty much shatters all the boundaries of the genre I have ever come across, and I've come across quite a few in my time. The simplicity of the language and ease with which the story moves is like a contrapuntal dance to a backdrop of terror and betrayal beyond anyone's imagination. The author, Salar Abdoh, knows the territory too well. I don't know if he's been there and done that or if he has access to sources few, if any, readers and even writers of this type of book have. If you want to know the psychology behind what just took place in America on September 11th of 2001 you'd better read this book. I've read many books by other writers who thought they were giving a portrayal of what the men on the other end of the war look like. Well, those authors often failed where Mr. Abdoh succeeds. The book is a tragedy in waiting. I don't want to give more away. I read the first page where the author was describing the different personality traits of various Middle Eastern operatives, and I thought: wow! this guy seems like he's come right out of the trenches of southern Lebanon or some place similar. He may or may not have, but the portrayal he gives is chilling, stupendously written and far above the inanities of your usual thriller with too much gadgetry and not enough psychology. If there is any shortcoming to the work it's that I would have liked the book to go on another hundred pages. I didn't want it to end. But end it did, on a note that well ... I don't want to give the story away.
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