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| Ascent from Darkness | 
enlarge | Author: Steven E. Wilson Publisher: H-G Books Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $14.65 You Save: $10.30 (41%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 66557
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 656 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.7 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6 x 1.6
ISBN: 0972948015 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780972948012 ASIN: 0972948015
Publication Date: September 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Ships immediately! Perfect and New! 2007 Hardcover.
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Product Description An international thriller of espionage, war, and love, interwoven with profound, world-changing events. Reluctant CIA operative Stone Waverly travels a shadowy trail from Odessa to Damascus, as agents with terror links evade an international dragnet. Everyone is suspect and nothing is as it seems in a land where Islamic extremists determined to plunge civilization into darkness battle Special Forces, Kurds, and Arabs intent on restoring hope to a world gone mad.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
A MOVING ADVENTURE TALE THAT ENCAPSULATES PRESENT-DAY IRAQ AND SYRIA July 15, 2007 21 out of 22 found this review helpful
In 2003 and 2004, the years when Wilson's novel "Ascent From Darkness" takes place, I was doing construction work in Basra, Baghdad and Al Hilla, Iraq. I was fortunate to be able to talk to many Iraqi workers representing the many ethnic and religious groups - uneducated, simple, hard working people - from fourteen to well over sixty years of age. Each and every one of these men had tales of horror to tell. Some had their wives raped by Saddam's henchmen, their mothers and fathers tortured and killed, or children taken away and forever lost.
Wilson brings these horrific tales vividly home. Reading his wonderful novel, I feel as if once again I am looking into those incredibly sad and tortured eyes under the hot desert sun. But Wilson's writing also gives us a glimpse of the hope that motivates these people--people who, despite what the pundits say, are so grateful to us for what we had done to give them a life worth living. Wilson weaves his gripping tale through three parallel stories. One stands by itself, the protagonist CIA agent Stone Waverly with an incredible, sometimes checkered, background; Special Forces soldiers, Tommy Waters and Billy Bates, initially young and innocent, but who grow up before our eyes; and a young Kurd fighter, Jalal, immersed in stirring events in the northern city of Kirkuk before and after the American invasion.
This novel is extremely timely as the news media ruminates on the events occurring in Syria and Iraq and the pros and cons of our involvement in the war. As I am writing this review, in Kabul Afghanistan, I hear from the darkened city, the Muezzin's' evening call to prayer mixing with my neighbor's TV blasting CNN. In so many ways, this is symbolic of the entire struggle so vividly related in "Ascent from Darkness."
As the story unfolds it becomes impossible to put the novel down. Wilson builds the plot, one suspense-filled scene upon another, one tight spot after another - all interwoven with descriptions of a part of the world that few have seen except through shallow, one-minute sound bites.
If you want to read a vividly entertaining novel - and at the same time understand what is really going on behind the headlines in Iraq and Syria, catch a glimpse into a world that is a combination of an Arabian fairy tale and fierce firefight, and experience deep human emotions through the eyes of those who are living the headlines, then this great book belongs on your bookshelf, to be read again and again, and shared with family and friends.
It's finally here, and worth the wait! July 10, 2007 16 out of 18 found this review helpful
The second international thriller by the author of Winter in Kandahar has finally arrived and I managed to get an advanced review copy prior to the official publication date. I was surprised to see Amazon already has it available...sneaky devils! Enthralling from the first chapter, it's hard to believe, but Wilson's new novel is even better than the first. Written in a similar genre, with CIA agent Stone Waverly from Winter in Kandahar becoming the protagonist (with many outstanding supporting characters). Fascinating from the first chapter, it is true to modern history, to the point it can be difficult to discern where fact ends and fiction begins.
Joan Phelps, reviewer for Clarion reviews said it better than I ever could. "If Merchant Ivory were to produce a movie about self-actualization and finding true love, while living through the horrors and confusion of a civil war . . . If Oliver Stone were to have free rein in capturing the nuances of espionage, duplicity, and combat among enemies as well as friends . . . And, if Steven E. Wilson's latest novel, Ascent from Darkness, were to win the attention of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences . . . the thought-provoking book would garner the attention of Hollywood and Washington, DC, alike. In his second published work of fiction, Wilson continues to entice adventure-thriller fans to step into the exciting world of CIA agent Stone Waverly. Waverly was a main character in Wilson's first novel, Winter in Kandahar. Stone is now seduced by the CIA director's confidence that Waverly is the only agent he can count on to unravel a scheme that resulted in the breach of a Ukrainian nuclear plant and theft of weapon-grade plutonium. As Ascent from Darkness encourages readers to dive into the culture of countries long at war, Stone's job description evolves, grows, and mutates while the story moves through Damascus and war-torn Kirkuk, Najaf and Baghdad. Fans of Wilson's creative endeavors know, however, that one subplot will not suffice. In Ascent from Darkness, the characters experience the joy of finding new love, the pain of losing loved ones, and the feelings of ambiguity that surface when humans question the worth of wars. It is these three scenarios that lure Wilson's fans to contemplate what choices they would make when confronted with choosing among country, religion, and family."
You will love it!
An intense, action-packed thriller from cover to cover. October 6, 2007 12 out of 13 found this review helpful
Benjamin Franklin Award finalist Steven E. Wilson presents Ascent from Darkness, a thrilling novel set against a backdrop of war, espionage, and hot and cold international clashes. When reluctant CIA agent Stone Waverly is assigned to seek the weapons-grade plutonium stolen from a Ukrainian nuclear plant, his search takes him from Odessa to Cologne to Amsterdam to Damascus. A race against time to stop terror ensues as Waverly, haunted by the past betrayals of a fellow operative as well as those closest to him, navigates the intrigue and outright ruthlessness rampant in Syra and war-riven Iraq. An intense, action-packed thriller from cover to cover. Also highly recommended is Wilson's previous novel, "Winter in Kandahar."
A compelling adventure too good to miss! August 20, 2007 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
Wilson has created another winner. Well written and fast moving, this novel transports the reader into the mind and culture of a faraway people. Moving quickly from one part of the story to the next, this adventure keeps the reader engrossed until the end. Tragedy, romance, mystery, treachery and heart-warming relationships are interwoven into a plot too good to miss.
Phenomenal "Faction" at its Best! October 6, 2007 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
This is a truly great novel immersed in the current day Middle East that is highly entertaining but also informative. The book was honored this summer (2007) at both the New York Book Festival and the Hollywood Book Festival. Placed primarily in current day Iraq and Syria at the beginning of the Iraq War, it is a multi-layered novel with three primary stories--reluctant CIA operative Stone Waverly torn between his family and love for his country, Special Forces soldiers Tommy Waters and Billy Bates dropped deep behind enemy lines near Najaf at the onset of hostilities, and long-suffering Kurdish peasants Tenya and Jalal--that in many ways encapsulates the challenges and triumphs faced in the Iraqi conflict.
Beginning with the Anfel gassing campaign in 1988 to punish the Kurds for supposed collusion with Iran during the Iran-Iraq war, the story fast forwards to the period just before and after the US led invasion of Iraq. The chapters tend to be short and focused. There are many underlying themes here...what it's like to be a CIA operative or soldier and having to leave your family behind for years at a time to defend your country, the dangers lurking in nuclear- and bio-terrorism (I hope the terrorists don't get any ideas from the finale of the novel), the plight of the Kurdish people in Northern Iraq, and the ongoing struggle between the Arab Sunni and Shia populations in Iraq.
It is a wonderful story, even better than Winter in Kandahar (which I loved), in my opinion. You will love it!
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