The Amerasians
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The Amerasians
I like the subject that this novel is built around. It’s a question really. What happened to all of the mixed children of American soldiers and Vietnamese women after the Americans left? There were thousands, but visitors to Vietnam can attest, they are simply not there now. What happened to them? How might they have been used against the country of their fathers? Donald E. Zlotnik explores these questions in an intelligent and humane story that never lets us forget that there are very painfully human consequences for wars and hubris. This story is character driven. LeBlonde, Joshua, Bobby Braverman, these are characters you come to know, admire, like, and even love. Even the government bureaucrats who make up the majority of the antagonists are drawn in a realistic way that helps you understand them even when you cannot approve of them. The characters are everything in this novel. And yet, there is a real plot, a realistic plot that could have been ripped from the pages of today’s headline. I’m not going to give it away. I give The Amerasians a four-star rating. In the genre of spy thrillers, it doesn't get much better than this. The writing is crisp and clean. The dialogue is great. There is action but it is well done not overdone. If you know who Smiley is, if you know who Jason Bourne is, then buy this book. You will not be disappointed. Mr. Zlotnik is a name to look for in the spy genre. A Great read awaits you.
- donaldzlotnik
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-- 22 Dec 2015, 16:31 --
"Ray," ironically, I wrote the plot for the novel before 9/11 seeing our civilian airlines as a very weak link. There are three major themes for the novel that I cover using a few "insider" documents I've read over the years. 1. What did happen to all the Eurasian (French fathers)and Amerasian (American fathers) children? 2. During the Vietnam War, heroin, cocaine and marijuana was cheaper for our troops to buy than it was to produce it. (Did North Vietnam subsidize it?) 3. We know for a fact the North Vietnamese held back American soldiers from the POW exchange in 1973. The ONLY Americans they released were those who had compromised themselves (mostly under torture) to the enemy. Many returned to the USA as dedicated communists ad traitors. Those Americans who did NOT break were held back as assurance Nixon would keep his promise to pay billions in reparation. Nixon reneged, so what happened to them? In addition to the LOYAL Americans--what happened to all the American drug dealers who took discharges and stayed in Vietnam as civilians? When the country fell--they could not get out.
Obviously, I can only guess--based on KNOWING the North Vietnamese and how they operated during the war; all of them were executed. I know the North Vietnamese desperately wanted a trade agreement with the United States that Clinton and McCain offered them--and they knew an American soldier could NEVER walk out of Vietnam after they told us they were NOT holding any.
The novel is to get the reader thinking...obviously you are, Ray!

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