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Hang Time by Zev Chafets — book cover

Hang Time

by Zev Chafets
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Overview

NBA great Tyrone Holliman isn't too thrilled to be traveling to Israel with legendary NCAA coach Digger Dawkins, but as an ambassador for his sport, he knows how to play the game. But neither man can imagine what lies ahead--armed abduction by Muslim terrorists that locks America and the Arab world in a confrontation that threatens to become World War III--and escalates into action as edgy and fast-paced as an NBA playoff game.

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Editorials

Jewish Book World

A thriller about the abduction of three American heroes, two of them NBA superstars, and the third a coach. They become the hostages in a situation that involves the United States and the Muslim world which could escalate into war if not successfully negotiated. Chafets, an American who has lived in Israel since 1967 and served in the government, has extensive first hand knowledge of the territory about which he writes and has created a suspenseful plot and filled it with memorable characters.

Publishers Weekly - Cahners\\Publishers_Weekly

Shi'ite terrorists and Western politicians play foul with two Detroit Pistons basketball stars and their coach in Chafets's third offbeat thriller (following The Bookmakers, 1995). A bumbling terrorist minion mistakes Pistons coach Digger Dawkins and star players Tyrone Holliman and Greg Bannion for a Zionist Congress contingent and abducts the trio for Dr. Abu Walid, a Palestinian fanatic who's guided by a blind sheik. Abu Walid's demands are two: the release by Israel of 1500 Palestinian prisoners, and a public apology by American President Teddy Masterson for 'anti-Islamic policies.' In order to milk the situation for its PR value, Masterson orders pressure applied on the Israeli government to mount frantic search-and-rescue activity for TV broadcast but to drag its heels on the actual search. Meanwhile, the kidnapped Tyrone's brother, Rasheed, a former cop, flies to Israel to meet his old friend Yoav Kedmi, now a street-smart police chief, to work out an independent plan to free the hostages. At the same time, Abu Walid begins to have Coach Dawkins systematically mutilated, dispatching videotapes of the violence to TV outlets. This in turn triggers American reprisal bombings against terrorist sites in Lebanon, Iran and elsewhere, prompting Israeli officials to sit on their hands about the hostages as they reap the benefits of the American show of force. So, ultimately, it's up to Rasheed and Kedmi, to find the hostages and confront the kidnappers. Chafets's tongue impales his cheek in a stinging slap at U.S. and Israeli political posturing that only a former head of the Israeli Government Press Office could have given. He cleverly depicts his ethnically diverse cast through deft description and dialogue, setting them and their outrageous actions against black humor that only occasionally threatens to engulf the narrative.

Publishers Weekly

Shi'ite terrorists and Western politicians play foul with two Detroit Pistons basketball stars and their coach in Chafets's third offbeat thriller (following The Bookmakers, 1995). A bumbling terrorist minion mistakes Pistons coach Digger Dawkins and star players Tyrone Holliman and Greg Bannion for a Zionist Congress contingent and abducts the trio for Dr. Abu Walid, a Palestinian fanatic who's guided by a blind sheik. Abu Walid's demands are two: the release by Israel of 1500 Palestinian prisoners, and a public apology by American President Teddy Masterson for "anti-Islamic policies." In order to milk the situation for its PR value, Masterson orders pressure applied on the Israeli government to mount frantic search-and-rescue activity for TV broadcast but to drag its heels on the actual search. Meanwhile, the kidnapped Tyrone's brother, Rasheed, a former cop, flies to Israel to meet his old friend Yoav Kedmi, now a street-smart police chief, to work out an independent plan to free the hostages. At the same time, Abu Walid begins to have Coach Dawkins systematically mutilated, dispatching videotapes of the violence to TV outlets. This in turn triggers American reprisal bombings against terrorist sites in Lebanon, Iran and elsewhere, prompting Israeli officials to sit on their hands about the hostages as they reap the benefits of the American show of force. So, ultimately, it's up to Rasheed and Kedmi, to find the hostages and confront the kidnappers. Chafets's tongue impales his cheek in a stinging slap at U.S. and Israeli political posturing that only a former head of the Israeli Government Press Office could have given. He cleverly depicts his ethnically diverse cast through deft description and dialogue, setting them and their outrageous actions against black humor that only occasionally threatens to engulf the narrative. (Apr.)

Robert Lipsyte

This is one smart, tough, mean fast break, driven by buddies for the millennium,,,, a Jewish cop with soul and a black ex-cop with chutzpah.

Kirkus Reviews

In a notably cynical, well-plotted thriller from Chafets (The Bookmakers, 1995, etc.), the kidnapping of three American basketball luminaries on a goodwill tour of Israel triggers a series of world-shaking events.

Snatched in Tel Aviv by an aide of Islamic fundamentalist Abu Walid, legendary coach Digger Dawkins and NBA players Tyrone Holliman and Greg Banion—at first mistaken for a Zionist hierarch and his two bodyguards—are whisked away in a limo to the outskirts of Jerusalem. Before their arrival, Banion is knifed to death, leaving only Holliman (a black star of the Detroit Pistons) and Dawkins (an irascible white) as captives of Walid, a US-educated physician who harbors great grudges against both the infidel West and rival Muslim sects. Though not what the doctor ordered, the prominent hostages suit his purposes—including the release of terrorists held in Israeli prisons. When Walid's initial demands are rebuffed, he begins surgically dismembering Dawkins. Videotapes of these atrocities provoke America's president first into bombing Shi'a enclaves in Lebanon and then Iran itself, thereby destroying sworn enemies of Walid, a militant Sunni. While the White House prepares for a demonstrably popular war against Islamic extremists, and the Israeli Prime Minister defers to the US, Holliman's brother Rasheed (a retired Motown cop who has built a prospering industrial security business) deduces correctly that none of the major players in this deadly game has an agenda that makes a priority of bringing the abductees back alive. With an old pal in Israel's police force, Rasheed mounts a private rescue mission that puts him at odds with both Shin Bet and American intelligence operatives. Following a rough-and-ready education in the Middle East's murderous folkways, he manages to liberate Tyrone in a bizarre confrontation with Walid and his loyal-to-a-fault underlings—-a finale that produces an opera-level body count.

A lively, suspenseful tale that reckons the true price of tribal animosities, religious fanaticism, and Realpolitik.

Book Details

Published
June 1, 1997
Publisher
Warner Books
Pages
256
Format
Paperbound
ISBN
9780446604116

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