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Prayers for the Assassin by Robert Ferrigno β€” book cover

Prayers for the Assassin

by Robert Ferrigno
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Overview

What would happen to America if the extremists won?

SEATTLE, 2040. The Space Needle lies crumpled. Veiled women hurry through the streets. Alcohol is outlawed, replaced by Jihad Cola, and mosques dot the skyline. New York and Washington, D.C., are nuclear wastelands. At the edges of the empire, Islamic and Christian forces fight for control, and rebels plot to regain free will.

Courageous rebel Sarah Dougan is a beautiful historian who uncovers information that will destabilize the nation. When she disappears, the security chief of the Islamic Republic of America calls upon Rakkim Epps, her secret lover and a former elite warrior, to find her. But Rakkim is being tracked by Darwin, a brilliant psychopath. To survive, he must become Darwin's assassin and embark upon a frenetic and bloody chase to find Sarah and helpher expose a shocking truth to the world.

Synopsis

"Seattle, 2040. The Space Needle lies crumpled. Veiled women hurry through the busy streets. Alcohol is outlawed, replaced by Jihad Cola, and mosques dot the skyline. New York and Washington, D.C., are nuclear wastelands. Phoenix is abandoned, Chicago the site of a civil war battle. At the edges of the empire, Islamic and Christian forces fight for control of a very different United States." "Burning with cinematic violence, fiendish betrayal, and global intrigue, Robert Ferrigno's thriller asks: What would happen to America if the terrorists won?" "After simultaneous suitcase-nuke attacks destroy New York, Washington, D.C., and Mecca - attacks blamed on Israel - a civil war breaks out. An uneasy truce leaves the nation divided between an Islamic republic with its capital in Seattle, and the Christian Bible Belt in the old South. In this frightening future there are still Super Bowls and Academy Awards, but calls to Muslim prayer echo in the streets and terror is everywhere. Freedom is controlled by the state, paranoia rules, and rebels plot to regain free will." "One of the most courageous is the beautiful young historian Sarah Dougan, who uncovers shocking evidence that the nuclear attacks might not have been planned by Israel, evidence that, if true, will destabilize the nation. When Sarah suddenly goes missing, the security chief of the Islamic republic calls upon Rakkim Epps, her secret lover and a former elite warrior, to find her - no matter what the risk." "But as Rakkim searches for Sarah, he is tracked by Darwin, a brilliant psychopathic killer trained in the same secretive unit as Rakkim. To survive, Rakkim must become Darwin's assassin - a most forbidding challenge. A bloody, nerve-racking chase takes them through the looking-glass world of the Islamic States of America, and culminates dramatically as Rakkim and Sarah battle to expose the truth to the entire world." Can the couple outrun Darwin? Who is really behind the nuke attacks? Will Sarah and

The New York Times - Janet Maslin

… Mr. Ferrigno has given serious thought to his hypothetical scenario. He tries to envision the complexities of daily life in a world where all the rules have changed - except in the Bible Belt, which has become a Christian refuge. In the Muslim nation, the black robes enforce religious laws and goats' heads are delicacies at butcher shops. Amusement-park attractions include AK-47's and suicide belts for children. Popular songs deliver constructive moral lessons. Needless to say, nobody draws political cartoons.

About the Author, Robert Ferrigno

Robert Ferrigno was born in South Florida, a tropical backwater rife with mosquitoes and flying cockroaches.

After earning college degrees in Philosophy, Film-Making, and Creative Writing, he returned to his first love, poker. He spent the next five years gambling full-time and living in a high-crime area populated by starving artists, alcoholics, thieves and drug dealers, becoming friends with many people who would later populate his novels.

He used some of his winnings to start a punk rock magazine called The Rocket, where he interviewed the Clash, Elvis Costello, Iggy Pop, etc. The success of The Rocket got him a job as a feature writer for a daily newspaper in Southern California, where he took the adventure-and-new-money beat.

Over the next seven years he flew jets with the Blue Angels, drove Ferraris, and went for desert survival training with gun nuts. He ultimately gave up his day job to become a novelist, and his first book, The Horse Latitudes, was called "the fiction debut of the season" by Time magazine.

His most recent novel, The Wake-Up, was described by Kirkus Reviews as "Sharp, fast, and slick. Ferrigno can read like Raymond Chandler on speed, with pages turning and adrenaline pretty high throughout."

Prayers for the Assassin is his ninth novel.

He lives in Washington State with his family.

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Editorials

From the Publisher


"[A] believable alternate history.... A chilling tale." -- USA Today

Janet Maslin

… Mr. Ferrigno has given serious thought to his hypothetical scenario. He tries to envision the complexities of daily life in a world where all the rules have changed β€” except in the Bible Belt, which has become a Christian refuge. In the Muslim nation, the black robes enforce religious laws and goats' heads are delicacies at butcher shops. Amusement-park attractions include AK-47's and suicide belts for children. Popular songs deliver constructive moral lessons. Needless to say, nobody draws political cartoons.
β€” The New York Times

Publishers Weekly

Taking post-9/11 conspiracy theories that blamed the attacks on Zionist agents as the seed for this unusual thriller, Ferrigno (The Wake-Up) posits a nuclear terrorist onslaught in 2015 on New York City, Washington, D.C., and Mecca that has all the earmarks of a Mossad operation. The blue states are moved by these horrors to convert to Islam, while the red states break away from the Islamic Republic, forming a Christian republic in the South. By 2040, three major parties struggle for control in the Islamic Republic: the moderate State Security forces, under Redbeard; the Black Robes, a fundamentalist religious police force; and the top-secret Assassins, under the Old One. When Sarah Dougan, Redbeard's niece and a respected historian, reinvestigates the 2015 attack for a new book, The Zionist Betrayal?, the Old One sics his deadliest assassin on her. Running from Seattle to Vegas, Sarah has a protector in her lover, an ex-fedayeen soldier named Rakkim Epps, whose agnostic POV anchors the novel. Fans of instapundit politics will love this thriller, which has the cinematic motion and atrocity F/X of a good airport read. However, Ferrigno's gimmick-the transformation of America into a cartoon version of Islam-lends the proceedings a damaging air of implausibility. (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

It's 2040, and America has been split into two countries-a Bible Belt Christian nation and a moderate Islamic republic-after New York, Washington, and Mecca were blasted off the map, supposedly by Israel. But then Sarah and her Muslim-convert boyfriend discover that Israel wasn't the real perpetrator. With a three-city tour. Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

A novelist known for hard-boiled suspense laced with dark humor conjures a vision of a frightening future, but isn't quite sure where to take it. Though his earlier tales of the seamy Los Angeles underbelly suggested an update of Raymond Chandler, Ferrigno (The Wake-up, 2004, etc.) makes a bold imaginative leap, setting his latest in the year 2042, amid the Islamic States of America. As a backdrop, a series of terrorist bombings have leveled New York, Washington and Mecca. After a confession by Israeli extremists, the country has shifted even farther toward cultural conservatism, as popularly embodied by a Muslim moral majority, with the Bible Belt (now comparatively liberal) seceding. Within a society in which moderates and zealots, Muslims and Christians, somehow sustain an uneasy peace, freethinking academic historian Sarah Dougan and her lover, Rakkim Epps, a former member of an elite Muslim warrior cadre, discover that what has become known as the Zionist Betrayal was in fact a very different sort of conspiracy. Is Allah on the side of the Islamic States, or is he on the side of the truth? A novelist such as Lee Child or David Lindsey might have found greater psychological and thematic depths within such a scenario, but Ferrigno too often settles for the sensationalism of extreme violence (eyeballs take a particular squishing within these pages) and pulse-pounding sex. Whatever social critique he has introduced quickly gives way to a formulaic thriller, with the obligatory doppelganger-only someone as well trained as Rakkim has a chance to stop Rakkim-the obligatory American playgrounds (Super Bowl, Vegas, Disneyland, the Oscars) and the obligatory suspicions of duplicity. By theend, Ferrigno hasn't said nearly as much as he could about the country in which we live or the country it might become. Instead of exploring the dynamics of holy wars and culture wars, Ferrigno reduces such provocative topics to pulp.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 2006
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group
Pages
496
Format
Mass Market Paperback
ISBN
9781416507680

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