The Trade, Jere Van Dyk
The Trade, Jere Van Dyk
List: $21.99 | Sale: $15.39
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The Trade
My Journey into the Labyrinth of Political Kidnapping

Author: Jere Van Dyk

Narrator: Paul Boehmer

Unabridged: 16 hr 43 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 02/06/2018


Synopsis

In 2008, American journalist Jere Van Dyk was kidnapped and held for forty-five days. At the time, he had no idea who his kidnappers were. They demanded a ransom and the release of three of their comrades from Guantanamo, yet they hinted at their ties to Pakistan and to the Haqqani network, a uniquely powerful group that now holds the balance of power in large parts of Afghanistan and the tribal areas of Pakistan. After his release, Van Dyk wrote a book about his capture and what it took to survive in this most hostile of circumstances. Yet he never answered the fundamental questions that his kidnapping raised: Why was he taken? Why was he released? And who saved his life?

Every kidnapping is a labyrinth in which the certainties of good and bad, light and dark are merged in the quiet dialogues and secret handshakes that accompany a release or a brutal fatality. In The Trade, Jere Van Dyk uses the sinuous path of his own kidnapping to explain the recent rise in the taking of Western hostages across the greater Middle East.

About Jere Van Dyk

Jere Van Dyk was born in Washington state and raised in a family of Plymouth Brethren. He first went to Afghanistan in 1973 when he and his younger brother drove an old Volkswagen from Germany to Kabul. He returned in 1981 as a young reporter for the New York Times and lived with the mujahideen, our allies fighting the Soviet Union. There, and later when he became the director of Friends of Afghanistan, a nonprofit organization overseen by the National Security Council and the State Department, he got to know the leaders who were linked from the beginning with al-Qaeda, and the Taliban, with Iran, Pakistan, and Saudi Arabia, and from which emerged the Islamic State.

After 9/11, he returned to Afghanistan and Pakistan for CBS News, for which he covered the kidnapping of Daniel Pearl in Karachi. In 2008, he was the next American journalist kidnapped in Pakistan. He is the author of Captive and In Afghanistan.


Reviews

Goodreads review by John

I found this book mostly a slog. Why? Perhaps it was the piled on short, choppy sentences (ala Hemingway). Or perhaps the swirl of characters both listed at book's beginning and to my frustration finding that some were unlisted. Shortcomings, yes, but Van Dyk deserves admiration. He was an intrepid......more

Goodreads review by Nancy

Imagine you're a Western journalist reporting from the murderous tribal borderlands of Afghanistan and Pakistan. Your fixers have set up a meeting with elusive Taliban leaders -- an astounding coup! But in a spectacular betrayal, you're captured and held prisoner, your life in jeopardy from day to d......more

Goodreads review by Geoff

Didn't find this particularly illuminating except to convince me that the author is nuts. It was good enough that I read it all the way to the end, but it could have been better.......more

Goodreads review by Florian

Good about the dynamics of kidnapping and the position of the person kidnapped. Too long and too complex in terms of cast of characters though.......more

Goodreads review by Don

Solid read!......more