Having lived the ex-pat life in a Muslim country or two
(although only in the poorer, more politically chaotic ones), I was immediately
drawn to the premise for Christopher Fowler’s The Sand Men. Fowler’s novel
happens to be set in Dubai, one of the richest of the Arab countries - but what
even the richest Muslim nations have in common with the poorest ones is a huge divide between the rich and the
poor. It is almost as if the two groups
live on different planets, and ex-pats thrown into the mix do not always handle
themselves properly when exposed to such a glaring contrast.
Lea and Roy Brook are in the financial struggle of their
lives in London when Roy receives a job offer from a company building several
luxury hotels in Dubai. Roy is out of
work and the young family is simply hanging on for dear life, so Roy’s
acceptance of the job offer is really a no-brainer. But after she has moved into the huge company-housing
compound with Roy and their fifteen-year-old daughter, Lea begins to wonder
about their decision.
The ex-pat compound has developed a subculture of its own,
one that is only remotely similar to anything that Lea has previously
experienced. The ex-pat wives, although
they are not forced to give up any of
their rights, are almost eager to spend their days in mindless cooking classes,
ladies groups, and puttering around the house while their husbands do the important work. These women may not be quite of the Stepford Wife
variety, but they are most definitely the next best thing. Lea, a magazine writer in her old life, is
not content to live that way for the two-year term of her husband’s work
contract, and almost immediately, her attitude brings her to the attention of a
handful of likeminded spirits – and a few sinister people who want to keep her
from stirring up trouble.
Christopher Fowler |
The Sand Men is
one of those thrillers in which the good guys find it almost impossible to tell
the difference between ally and enemy – and as players come and go, Fowler
makes certain that his readers face the same dilemma. When a long series of very strange accidents
begins to claim the lives of those Lea feels closest to, she senses that time
is running out for her. She either has
to figure out what is happening and stop it, or she has to run for her
life. But whom can she trust?
As Joseph Heller put it in Catch-22, “Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean they aren’t
after you.”
The Sand Men provides
quite a thriller ride for those able to reach the proper level of suspended
disbelief. If you’re willing to go
there, this one might be for you.
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