The Better Angels
Charles McCarry
'This novel has a great plot and some wonderful characters ... But while the novel is well worth reading for its own sake, inevitably, its main interest for contemporary readers lies in its 1979 predictions of what the world would be like by the turn of the century. Some of the things contemporary readers will recognise include the rise of suicide bombings, the possibility of stealing a presidential election by hacking the computers on which the results are tallied and the rise of Islamic fundamentalism as an international threat.'
Kerryn Goldsworthy (Sydney Morning Herald)When Charles McCarry’s The Better Angels was first published in 1979, one reviewer lamented that the author’s premise — that terrorists would use passenger-filled airliners as tools of terror — was so incredible as to be an obstacle to the reader’s suspension of disbelief. In retrospect, this was to be just one of the novel’s many facets that would prove to be prophetic.
The Better Angels takes place in an election year, close to the turn of the century, in a deeply polarised America. The presidential race matches a tall, lantern-jawed liberal against a far-right former businessman with deep ties to the energy industry. The principal threat to the country comes from Islamic terrorists who are almost impossible to track down, are led by an Arab prince made rich by oil, and are desperate to acquire nuclear bombs to use against Israel and major American cities.
The similarities don’t end there. Written at the height of the Cold War, McCarry’s foresight and crisp language produced a masterpiece perhaps more applicable to the world today than when it was first published.
Charles McCarry
Charles McCarry established an international reputation as a novelist in 1975, with the publication of his worldwide bestseller, The Tears of Autumn. He is the author of ten other critically acclaimed novels — The Miernik Dossier, The Secret Lovers, Old Boys, The Better Angels, The Last Supper, The Bride of the Wilderness, Second Sight, Shelley's Heart, Lucky Bastard, and Christopher's Ghosts — which have been translated into more than 20 languages. During the Cold War, he was a CIA officer operating under deep cover in Europe, Africa, and Asia. Since his resignation from the CIA, Charles McCarry has divided his time between the Berkshires and Florida's east coast.