<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Neither Mason, a U.S. Army Special Forces medic, nor Lisette, a foreign correspondent, has emerged from America's long post-9/11 wars in Iraq and Afghanistan unscathed. Yet war also exerts a terrible draw that neither can shake--the noble calling, the camaraderie, the life-and-death stakes. Where else in the world can such a person go? All roads lead to Colombia, where the US, with its patented fusion of intelligence dominance and quick-striking special operators, has partnered with local government to stamp out a vicious civil war and keep the predatory narco gangs at bay. Mason, now a liaison to the Colombian military, is ready for the good war, and Lisette is more than ready to cover it. For Juan Pablo, Mason's counterpart in the Colombian officer corps, translating reality into a language the Americans can understand requires a cartoonist's gift for caricature, but it's child's play next to the challenge of navigating the viper's nest of factions bidding for power, in the capital and far out in the field. And if Juan Pablo's view is dark, the outlook of Abel, a lieutenant in the militia Los Mil Jesuses, which controls territory in rural Norte de Santander, a region on the Venezuelan border where the writ of law scarcely runs, is positively Stygian. Abel has lost everything he loves in the carnage that for his entire life has flowed unceasingly in this region, where the lines between drug cartels, militias, and the state are semi-permeable. It is Abel's cruel fate to find safety only by serving a man he has come to fear and loathe. Missionaries is an astonishment, a novel of extraordinary suspense whose central, unsparing drama is infused by a geopolitical sophistication and a wisdom about the human heart that would be rare even in isolation. As Los Mil Jesuses make their move to fill a power vacuum in Norte de Santander, aided and abetted by the Colombian military for its own reasons, the Americans are made pawns of a game they don't even begin to understand. The result is an unfolding calamity that will leave no character unscathed, and will echo across the planet. A work whose accomplishment calls forth comparisons to Joseph Conrad, Graham Greene, and Robert Stone, Missionaries ultimately stands apart as its own electrifying new form of artistic reckoning with the forces we have unleashed in our world"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>One of President Obama's Favorite Books of the Year <b>A <i>New York Times</i> Notable Book </b> <b>One of the <i>Wall Street Journal</i> Ten Best Books of the Year <p/></b><i>Missionaries</i> is a courageous book: It doesn't shy away, as so much fiction does, from the real world." --Juan Gabriel Vásquez, <i>The New York Times Book Review <p/></i>"A sweeping, interconnected novel of ideas in the tradition of Joseph Conrad and Norman Mailer . . . By taking a long view of the 'rational insanity' of global warfare, <i>Missionaries</i> brilliantly fills one of the largest gaps in contemporary literature." <i>--<i>The Wall Street Journal</i></i> <p/>The debut novel from the National Book Award-winning author of <i>Redeployment</i><br></b><br>A group of Colombian soldiers prepares to raid a drug lord's safe house on the Venezuelan border. They're watching him with an American-made drone, about to strike using military tactics taught to them by U.S. soldiers who honed their skills to lethal perfection in Iraq. In <i>Missionaries</i>, Phil Klay examines the globalization of violence through the interlocking stories of four characters and the conflicts that define their lives. <p/>For Mason, a U.S. Army Special Forces medic, and Lisette, a foreign correspondent, America's long post-9/11 wars in the Middle East exerted a terrible draw that neither is able to shake. Where can such a person go next? All roads lead to Colombia, where the US has partnered with local government to keep predatory narco gangs at bay. Mason, now a liaison to the Colombian military, is ready for the good war, and Lisette is more than ready to cover it. Juan Pablo, a Colombian officer, must juggle managing the Americans' presence and navigating a viper's nest of factions bidding for power. Meanwhile, Abel, a lieutenant in a local militia, has lost almost everything in the seemingly endless carnage of his home province, where the lines between drug cartels, militias, and the state are semi-permeable. <p/>Drawing on six years of research in America and Colombia into the effects of the modern way of war on regular people, Klay has written a novel of extraordinary suspense infused with geopolitical sophistication and storytelling instincts that are second to none. <i>Missionaries</i> is a window not only into modern war, but into the individual lives that go on long after the drones have left the skies.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"<i>Missionaries</i> is a courageous book: It doesn't shy away, as so much fiction does, from the real world . . . Is there such a thing as a 'good war, ' like the one Mason seeks? <i>Missionaries</i> is skeptical at best; it does believe, however, in fiction's ability to illuminate these dark places. And so the novel goes on, undeterred, exploring and revealing whole human worlds that would remain inaccessible without it." <b>--Juan Gabriel Vásquez, <i>The New York Times Book Review</i></b> <p/>"A sweeping, interconnected novel of ideas in the tradition of Joseph Conrad and Norman Mailer . . . By taking a long view of the 'rational insanity' of global warfare, <i>Missionaries</i> brilliantly fills one of the largest gaps in contemporary literature." <b>--<i>The Wall Street Journal <p/></i></b>"[This] compact epic of a novel contains perhaps Klay's finest writing yet . . . Using his formidable gifts for scene-setting, meaningful irony and deep human empathy, Klay weaves together a set of stories over the course of nearly three decades . . . Amid raging fires and illness and constitutional crises, Klay's book roars something vital: Never forget about war or the blood and bone and the evil and the reckless idealism of who we all really are. <b><i><b>--<b><i>Los Angeles Times</i></b><br></b><br></i></b>"[This] astounding novel . . . does not shy away from the thorny moral questions and psychological impacts of conflict, and the result is at once terrifying and thought-provoking." <b><i><b>--<i>The New York Times</i></b></i></b> <p/>"This is a gray universe where it's difficult to distinguish the good guys and gals from the bad, and it rings true to those of us who have spent time in these places. . . . will stick with you." <b>--NPR, Best Books of 2020 <p/></b>"Wrenching and insightful." <b>--<i>The New Yorker<br></i></b><br>"Klay's considerable accomplishment in <i>Missionaries</i>, goes well beyond incisive 'insider access into the next permutation of the massive, industrial-scale U.S. machine for generating and executing targets.' In the tradition of Robert Stone and Graham Greene, he makes geopolitical misadventure, cultural blindness and atavistic behavior pulse inevitably toward terrible denouement." <b>--<i>Associated Press</i></b> <p/>"Frequently gripping and powerfully written." <b>--<i>The Washington Post<br></i></b><br>"Thorough, forceful, and ambitious . . . <i>Missionaries</i> is a deeply ethical novel, and one that often pauses to question the purpose of war and possibility of redemption for combatants of all kinds. It is also a very well-built narrative . . . Klay is able to write kidnapping and murder without sensationalism; he never loses track of his moral questions, even while toggling between interiority and thriller-paced action. He maintains clarity through a sequence of events so intricate and scenes so populous that the vast majority of writers -- great ones included: John Le Carré is often guilty of this -- would forfeit the reader's understanding. Most importantly, Klay tends well to his many characters, giving each not only a voice, but a resolution . . . by the end, its humanity, like its purpose, is clear." <b>--NPR.org</b> <p/>"Klay saw something new and terrifying in modern war, and his first novel brings something new and fearsome to modern war literature. Klay's confident vision and disciplined command of a complex structure makes <i>Missionaries </i>a powerful, meaningful, and original addition to war lit's crowded catalog . . . <i>Missionaries</i> is new and vital because it transcends the inward-facing, American-oriented ennui that modern war literature too often relies on." <b>--<i>Daily Beast</i></b> <p/>"Klay . . . shares with Joseph Conrad, an obvious lodestar, a command of the complexity and precariousness of an interconnected global order. He shares with Greene an awareness that global phenomena are inseparable from human beings, like Mason, who frets endlessly about being a shitty father and absent husband, or Pablo, with his well-founded anxieties about how his young daughter perceives his brutal work. There are souls at stake here. The terrible arc of Abel's life, in particular, is as haunting as <i>Lord Jim</i> or <i>The Power and the Glory</i> as a portrait of disgrace in pursuit of redemption . . . <i>Missionaries</i> is galvanic and affecting, its prose shifting from beautiful and graceful to hard-boiled as hell; above all, it bears the unmistakable stamp of having been written by someone who didn't need a research assistant to get the bloody details right. That this hard-won knowledge is made to serve such superb, morally serious storytelling is reassuring. The bodies may pile up in <i>Missionaries</i>, but at least we have our proof that the novel is far from dead." <b>--<i>Washington Examiner</i></b> <p/>"Brutal, subtle, and witheringly savvy, Phil Klay's first novel, <i>Missionaries</i>, casts a scathing light on American military ventures overseas, while also immersing readers in the tumult of Colombia as it struggled toward peace and democracy in the first decades of the 21st century . . . Klay, through archival and on-the-ground research, delivers what feels remarkably like a genuine South American novel built from lived experience of his numerous Colombian characters." <b>--<i>Boston Globe</i></b> <p/>"Building on exhaustive research and a seemingly endless capacity to develop rich, psychologically complex characters, Klay captures the wretchedness of neglected Colombian villages brutalized by competing murderers . . . There is an unblinking forcefulness in Klay's accounts of psychotic punishments whimsically inflicted on innocent people by renegade militia and the sometimes meaningless results of official tactical missions." <b>--<i>Seattle Times</i></b> <p/>"[<i>Missionaries</i>'s] flashes of genius and beauty are entirely in its details . . . Klay is brilliant on things like what it's like to walk through a city after a recent bombing. He is very fine on what he calls the soundtrack of war: 'the rasp of the Velcro on magazine pouches opening, the crunch of dried mud yielding to the massive tires of heavy armored vehicles, the cough of a diesel engine, the roar of a passing Chinook, the excited shouts from a nearby soccer field, the chirping of birds.' He understands both the technology of war and the wet stuff of brutality and torture. He's dryly funny about the new realities of American journalism and foreign reporting, where online 'there's no page A26 to flip past, because people don't accidentally get reported facts on the way to the opinion page anymore.'" <b>--Dwight Garner, </b> <b><i>New York Times</i></b> <p/>"Philip Klay's <i>Missionaries</i> is a post-9/11 novel that uses the formal properties of the novel--its geographic sweep and local focus, and its social reach and its deep-dive into single lives--to anchor violence in the lives of individual characters even as he chronicles the societies that perpetuate and continue violence. Klay, a Marine Corps veteran who deployed to Iraq, shows how an intense focus on specific locations is necessary to tell the story of global political violence. His novel shows the power of the novel today to make intimate and personal immensely complicated political, social, and military conflicts . . . Klay's ability to draw locations and people so precisely yields a detailed picture of an entire country . . . Klay uses sweeping geographic range to make violence intimate and precise local knowledge to show violence on a global scale. In this way, <i>Missionaries</i> does not orient or fix war by making war look and feel only a certain way or have a specific nature. It showcases the capacity of fiction to interpret war by telling the story of individuals coming to terms with their own experiences of war." <b>--<i>War on the Rocks</i></b> <p/>"When Iraq War veteran Phil Klay's debut short story collection<i>, Redeployment</i>, won the National Book Award in 2014, it was clear that a talented new writer had appeared on the literary scene. The promise revealed in that work now is fulfilled in his first novel, <i>Missionaries</i> . . . A tightly controlled, propulsive story. . . . In its mood and subject matter, <i>Missionaries</i> bears a kinship to novels from the '70s and '80s like Robert Stone's <i>A Flag for Sunrise</i> and Joan Didion's <i>A Book of Common Prayer</i>. Phil Klay impressively updates the themes of those classic novels for our time, where 'clean wars with clear boundaries' no longer exist." <b>--</b><i><b>Shelf Awareness</b></i> <p/>"If <i>Redeployment</i> was about what happened when we ship wars abroad, then <i>Missionaries</i> is what happens when war comes roaring right back. Expansive, explosive, and epic." <b>--Marlon James, author of <i>Black Leopard, Red Wolf</i></b> <p/>"Phil Klay's work has the large canvas, bitter clarity, and wild imagination of the great Robert Stone. With <i>Missionaries</i> he more than fulfills the immense promise of <i>Redeployment</i>." <b>--George Packer, author of <i>The Unwinding</i> and <i>Our Man</i></b> <p/>"With <i>Missionaries</i> Klay, winner of the National Book Award in 2014, has dropped a novel on us of a muscular veracity as terrifying and important as it is rare in contemporary writing." <b><i>--The Millions</i></b> <p/>"National Book Award-winner Klay displays his signature virtuosity in this richly textured, masterful mosaic of modern Colombia. A small village serves as both backdrop and microcosm of the country's ongoing turmoil. The struggle for survival is deftly juxtaposed with the struggle for power, and the varying gradations of each are explored through multiple perspectives with nuance, grace, and poignancy . . . Each character is rendered in psychologically astute moral complexity and must interrogate his or her own complicity in a corrupt and often violent system. Ultimately, all are pawns in the chess match of deep-state machinations masquerading as diplomacy. As the characters' lives begin to intersect in a rewarding, yet tension-filled denouement, the author's prodigious skill and deep understanding of the region provide the scaffolding to explore essential questions of human dignity and sacrifice. A triumphant achievement that elevates Klay to the top echelon of contemporary writers."<b> --<i>Booklist</i> (starred review)</b> <p/>"[Klay] creates ambiguity not through atmospheric language or irony (<i>Redeployment</i> had its share of Heller-esque gallows humor) but through careful psychological portraits that reveal how readily relationships grow complicated and how even good intentions come undone in the face of humanity's urge to violence. . . . An unflinching and engrossing exploration of violence's agonizing persistence." --<b><i>Kirkus</i> (starred review)</b> <p/>"The prose is consistently staggering, whether in the characters' moments of self-reflection or unflinching descriptions of brutality . . . it's quite a ride." --<i><b>Publishers Weekly</b> </i> <p/> "What happens when a novel becomes more than a novel? It becomes a prophecy. Phil Klay has written a prophecy." --<b>Elliot Ackerman, author of <i>Red Dress in Black and White</i></b> <p/> "Having spent three years as head of Southern Command, in charge of U.S. support for the Colombian military, I can attest to the lethal accuracy of Klay's depiction." <b>--Admiral James Stavridis</b> <p/>"Phil Klay's <i>Missionaries</i> is a big, rich, clear-eyed book about death and life; wise, compassionate, and, yes, as cynical as it needs to be when necessary, but full of vivid people caught up in that organized human violence which is our species' haunting passion. I've maybe never read a war novel this good." --<b>Ayad Akhtar, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright of <i>Disgraced</i></b> <p/> "Phil Klay's <i>Missionaries </i>has a sweep and incisiveness to it I had almost forgotten novels were capable of. I haven't been so gripped by a book in years. It is immensely smart and farseeing, and utterly unsparing. Extraordinary." --<b>Garth Greenwell, author of <i>Cleanness </i>and <i>What Belongs to You</i></b> <p/> "This engaging and far-ranging novel is about the thorny battle for reconciliation in the midst of an endlessly-fought war. For all the tense geopolitics and violent special forces raids and guerilla warfare in <i>Missionaries</i>, Phil Klay's true subject is the contested territory of the heart. It is here, in the novel's poignant exploration of faith and parental love and uneasy moral compromises, that the cost of US military intervention is laid bare. A chilling and accomplished novel." <b>--Kirstin Valdez Quade, author of <i>Night at the Fiestas</i></b> <p/>"Something new for the canon of war stories . . . a true twenty-first century document: respectful of its antecedents but blazing its own path; a big, straight-faced, but subtly accommodating book that makes room for the absurd and the humane, for a sense of purpose and a sense of futility in equal measure." <b>--<i>Sewanee Review</i></b> <p/> "<i>Missionaries</i> is an urgent, detailed, compassionate and quietly furious novel about America and her Forever Wars. Intensely readable, exciting, funny and heartbreaking--it will change you." <b>--A.L. Kennedy <p/></b>"Shook me to my core. Klay takes the reader into the heart of Colombian darkness; the abuses of power, the forgotten lives of girls and women and how quickly human dignity--and conscience--get eroded in extreme times. This is audacious, heartbreaking, epic fiction."<b> --Mary Costello, author of <i>The River Capture </i> <p/></b>"A daring, ambitious novel." <b><b><i>--America Magazine</i></b><br></b><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Phil Klay is a veteran of the US Marine Corps and the author of <i>Redeployment</i>, which won the 2014 National Book Award for Fiction, and <i>Missionaries</i>, which was named one of the Ten Best Books of 2020 by the <i>Wall Street Journal</i>. His writing has appeared in <i>The New York Times</i>, <i>The Washington Post</i>, <i>The Wall Street Journal</i>, <i>The Atlantic</i>, and elsewhere. He currently teaches fiction at Fairfield University, and is a Board member for Arts in the Armed Forces.
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