Review “Torn from the headlines…EXILE delivers.” ―The New York Times Book Review“Artful…compelling.” ―USA Today“Astonishing, hugely entertaining.” ―Bill Clinton Read more From the Back Cover "Torn from the headlines…Exile delivers."―The New York Times Book Review David Wolfe is a successful American lawyer being primed for a run for Congress. But when the phone rings and he hears the voice of Hana Arif―the Palestinian woman with whom he had a secret affair in law school―he begins a completely unexpected journey."Artful…compelling."―USA Today The next day, the prime minister of Israel is assassinated by a suicide bomber while visiting San Francisco. Soon, Hana is accused of being the mastermind behind the murder. Now David faces an agonizing choice: Will he, a Jew, represent her?"Astonishing, hugely entertaining."―Bill ClintonThe most challenging case of David's career requires that he delve deep into the lives of Hana and her militant Palestinian husband, all the way back to Israel and the West Bank. There he uncovers the couple's dangerous connections…culminating in an explosive trial where the stakes are Hana's life―and the future of two peoples. Read more About the Author Richard North Patterson is the author of thirteen previous bestselling and critically acclaimed novels. Formerly a trial lawyer, Patterson was the SEC's liaison to the Watergate special prosecutor, has served on the boards of several Washington advocacy groups, and is currently the chairman of Common Cause, the grassroots citizens lobby. He lives in San Francisco and on Martha's Vineyard with his partner, Dr. Nancy Clair. Read more Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter OneUntil Hana Arif called him after thirteen years of silence, and he knew whose voice it was so quickly that he felt time stop, David Wolfe’s life was proceeding as he had long intended.Except for the spring of Hana, as he still thought of it, David had always had a plan. He had planned to excel in prep school as a student and at sports, and did. After college, he had planned to go to Harvard Law, and he had. He had planned to become a prosecutor and then enter politics, and now he was.That this last was proceeding even more smoothly than he could have hoped was due to his fiancée, Carole Shorr, who, though not planned on, had entered his life at least in part because her plans meshed so well with his. Now their plan was the same: marriage, two children, and a run for Congress, which continued the more or less straight line of David’s life since his early teens, when he had realized that his dark good looks, wry humor, and quickness of mind were matched by a self-discipline that wrung every last particle out of the talents he possessed. Only once—with Hana—had nothing mattered but another person, an experience so frightening, exhilarating, and, in the end, scarifying that he had endured it only by clinging to his plans until they became who he was. It was a sin, David had come to believe, to be surprised by your own life.This conclusion did not make him callous, or disdainful of others. The experience of Hana had taught him too much about his own humanness. And he knew that his self-discipline and gift for detachment were part of the mixed blessings, perhaps intensified by Hana, passed down by his parents—a psychiatrist and an English professor who shared a certain intellectual severity, both of them descendants of German Jews and so thoroughly assimilated that their banked emotions reminded him of the privileged WASPs he had encountered when his parents had dispatched him from San Francisco to prep school in Connecticut, with little more sentiment than he had come to expect.All this made him value and even envy the deep emotionality of Carole and her father, Harold—the Holocaust survivor and his daughter, for whom their very existence was to be celebrated. So that this morning, when he and Carole had selected a wedding date after making love, and her eyes had filled with tears, he understood at once that her joy was not only for herself but for Harold, who would celebrate their wedding day on behalf of all the ghosts whose deaths in Hitler’s camps—as unfathomable to Harold as his own survival—required him to invest his heart and soul in each gift life gave him, of which his only child was the greatest.So David and Carole had made love again. Afterward, she lay against him, smiling, her breasts touching his chest, the tendrils of her brunette curls grazing his shoulder. And he had forgotten, for a blissful time, the other woman, smaller and darker, in his memory always twenty-three, with whom making love had been to lose himself.Thus the David Wolfe who answered his telephone was firmly rooted in the present and, blessedly, his future. He was, he had told himself once more, a fortunate man, gifted with genetics that, with no effort on his part, had given him intelligence, a level disposition, and a face on which every feature was pronounced—strong cheekbones, ridged nose, cleft chin—plus cool blue eyes to make it one that people remembered and television flattered. To his natural height and athleticism he added fitness, enforced by a daily regime of weights and aerobic exercise.His current life was a similar fusion of luck, self-discipline, and careful planning. That morning, upon reaching his clean and sparely decorated law office, David had flipped his desk calendar, looking past the orderly notations of the lawyer and would-be politician—the hearings, depositions, and trial dates of a practice that commingled civil law with criminal defense; the lunches, evening speeches, and meetings of civic groups that marked the progress of a Democratic congressman-in-waiting—and lit on the wedding date he and Carole had selected. It would be an occasion. Harold Shorr would spare no expense, and this served Carole’s interest in a day that combined deep celebration with an opportunity for David’s further advancement in the Jewish community that would become his financial base in politics.This was fine with David: Carole’s penthouse was a focal point for Democratic and Jewish causes, and he had become accustomed to Carole filling dates with social opportunities both onerous and interesting, the latter represented by the dinner Carole was hosting that evening for the Israeli prime minister, Amos Ben-Aron. This one of Carole’s many dinners promised to be particularly intriguing. Formerly an obdurate hard-liner, Ben-Aron was now barnstorming America to rally support for his controversial last-ditch plan to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinians, with whom it had too long been locked in a violent and corrosive struggle—about which, as it happened, David knew a little more than he could have admitted to Carole without inflicting needless wounds, or reopening his own.Dismissing the thought, David gazed down at his wedding date. Perhaps the prime minister, David mused with a smile, would agree to serve as their best man. No doubt Carole had considered this; in her reckoning, David’s only flaw was a shortfall of Jewishness. Not that this was obvious: a gentile former girlfriend, studying David’s face after lovemaking, had remarked, “You look like an Israeli film star, if there is such a thing.” Then, as now, David had no idea; he had never been to Israel. No doubt Carole would change this, as well.Still light of spirit, he had just looked up from the calendar to his view of the San Francisco skyline when the telephone rang.He glanced at the caller ID panel. But the number it displayed was a jumble that made no sense to him—a cell phone number, he supposed, perhaps foreign. Intrigued, he answered it.“David?”Her voice, precise and soft at once, caused the briefest delay in his response.“Yes?”“David.” The repetition of his name was quieter yet. “It’s Hana.”“Hana,” he blurted. He stood up, half out of reflex, half from shock. “What on earth...”“I know.” She hesitated. “I know. I mean, it’s been long.”“Thirteen years.”“Thirteen years. And now I’m visiting here. San Francisco.”David managed to laugh. “Just like that.”“Not exactly. Saeb is relentlessly tracking Amos Ben-Aron, pointing out the manifest defects and incongruities of this new plan of his—perhaps more sharply than our American hosts are happy with.” She said this as if it were logical, expected. “So you two are married.”“Yes. And we—or I—decided it was time for Munira to see the United States.” This time it was Hana who laughed. “I’m a mother, David.”There was something in the timbre of her laugh that David could not define—perhaps simply the acknowledgment that she was not the young woman he had known, the lover he might still remember.“It happens,” he answered. “Or so I’m told.”“Not you?”“Not yet. But I’m getting married in seven months. According to the conventions, children follow.” Temporarily, he lost his place in the conversation. “So how is it, being a parent?”This time it was Hana who seemed, for a moment, distracted. “Munira,” she answered dryly, “is my own parents’ revenge. She’s bright, willful, and filled with the passion of her own ideas. Sometimes I think she will never imagine that I was such a person. Or experience the kind of amusement, pride, and chagrin a mother feels when she looks at her daughter and sees herself.”Though he had begun to pace, David smiled a little. “So she’s beautiful, as well.”“Beautiful?” The word seemed to take Hana by surprise. David recalled that she had often seemed unaware of her own impact—at least until she looked at him and saw it in his eyes. “Oh,” she added lightly, “of course.”With this, neither seemed to know what to say. “This is all right?” she asked.“What?”“To call you.”“Of course. I’m glad you did.”She hesitated. “Because I thought we might have lunch.”David stood still. “The three of us?” he asked at length.Another pause. “Or four of us, counting your wife-to-be.”She tried to infuse this with a tone of generosity, including in her proposal a woman she did not seem to have expected. “How is Saeb?” David parried.“Much as you would recall him. We are both professors at Birzeit University, near Ramallah—it’s been some time, you may recall, since the Israeli army last shut us down. Saeb is still brilliant, and still angry. Perhaps angrier than me now. He’s just as committed to Palestine, but more radical. And very much more Islamic.” She stopped there. Is it such a good idea, David wanted to ask, to put Saeb and me at the same table once again? But to question this would be to intimate that to Saeb, and perhaps to Hana, David occupied the lingering psychic space that Hana did for him. Then she spoke again.“Perhaps you’re right,” she said simply, answering the question he had not asked. “You are well, David?”“I’m well. Very.” He felt a brief twinge, his last memory of Hana. “And you?”“Yes. Enough.” Once more she sounded hesitant, perhaps rueful that she had calle... Read more
C**A
Amazing and difficult and hard
A complex subject not well understood by most Americans. or the world for that matter. Although the format is fiction ,it deals with many of the real issues facing Israel and Palestine today. How will it get resolved ? Can it be resolved? Amazing and difficult and hard , and sad and challenging for all , and the world .. a heck of a read if you want to get a small , short understanding of the overall issues and how it plays out in the real world, recommend highly !
N**R
Exile: Probably Richard North Patterson's best novel.
I'll start by admitting that I am A fan of Mr. Patterson's writing. This novel, in particular, combines an interesting plot, a great deal of research and a wonderful usage of the English language. There is no pretense of being the ultimate work of art, and yet, it provides much information on a topic that many of us know so little about: the enormous problems that bedevil the Middle East which seem to have little chance of being resolved in the near future.The plot revolves around two main characters who, in their own way, represent the abyss between Palestinians and Israelis. Their personal inner struggle so well defines the greater struggle of two peoples who have suffered a great deal and who feel ownership of the same land. Mr. Patterson does a good job of presenting both sides and as far as I can tellshows no favoritism.Interest of the reader is high because of the many twists and turns as well as the factual information (which I found quite educational). I highly recommend this book.
S**E
I read this book twice and love it - may even read it a third time
I read this book twice and love it - may even read it a third time! I'd given my wellworn copy to a friend and knew I'd probably want to read it again so ordered this copy. It combines a personal story, current events, history - enjoyed the story line but felt I'd also learned something. I would strongly recommend this to anyone - wish there'd been a sequel.P.S. I've enjoyed every book that I've read by this author.
C**R
Fabulous!
This is the first Patterson book I have read and I am thrilled to say the best book I have read in some time. His narrative is so compelling, the reader feels as though he is present in every place the author takes him.The story is magical and in part reminded me of Exodus. I learned so much more than I already knew about the Holy Land and how much thereis to learn these days about the Palestinian people.The characters are first rate and I could picture each of them. What a movie this could be!!I was drawn to the struggle of every single person in this book and when it was over, I felt the pain that each and every one of them wassuffering.A fabulous book for those of us who loved Irving Wallace's book The Seven Minutes. I recommend this to all serious readers and those who enjoy being transported to foreign places, while learning so much along the way.
P**R
Slow Read
The story contains some thought provoking geopolitical and historical elements. I applaud Patterson for his attempt at objectivity, especially given that the central theme is one with a long history of controversy.The main characters and their back stories are introduced early on, setting the stage for the action and plot. Israel's prime minister is killed by a suicide bomber in San Francisco. The main character David Wolfe sacrifices his political future and the relationship with his fiance' to represent and defend the Palestinian suspect, Hana Arif, who is accused of planning the assassination.The story takes David on a number of predictable twists and turns as he develops a case to defend Arif in court. There is a history between David and Hana, who were lovers when they both attended law school several years earlier.It was a long read and for me, not very satisfying.
L**Y
I felt that I had a much better understanding of the diversity of perspectives among and between ...
After I read this book, I felt that I had a much better understanding of the diversity of perspectives among and between Arab and Jewish Israelis and why so many harbor so much intense fear and loathing of one another. I believe it's a balanced presentation and, frankly, one that didn't give me much hope for a decent resolution any time in the forseeable future.This is also a good mystery story. Once I got into it, I didn't want to stop reading and, when I did, I couldn't wait to get back to it. This book would make a great movie; I wonder if anyone is considering that.
J**L
More Than A Novel - There Is Much Reality In This
Like some other reviewers here, I used to read Patterson's novels but had drifted away from him in recent years for no definable reason. While this is an entertaining, although overly long story, of more importance and interest to me was the drawing together of the situation in the Middle East and the seemingly unsovable problems of Israel and the Palestinians.Special Envoy, George Mitchell would do well to read this piece for the information it contains and can skip over the story of the individuals involved.Patterson always did do stories that had a legal bent to them best and I found the latter part of the book which dealt with the trial of Hana Arif very well done.It will take some time to wade through this, but the education received is worth the effort.
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