| About the Book
The Land is a fictional Pakistan, and the
Five Rivers are those of the Indus Basin. The time is the late
1960s, when attempts at representative government have faded and the
military and police are moving into permanent dominance amidst a
debilitating brew of tribal strife, the heroin trade, a flourishing
black market, and a corruption-inducing system of central planning
and controls. The looming demise of the faltering military leader
heightens uncertainty and tensions to the point where ever more
desperate individuals must break the law to survive and otherwise
decent people are prone to deception and violence.
Enter Karl Pedersen, honest, self-confident,
straightforward advisor from the American Midwest more culturally
ignorant than ugly fleeing a broken marriage and seeking a year of
quiet healing in a South Asian backwater that, unbeknownst to him, is
about to explode. What follows is a fast-moving tale of intercultural
love, adventure, revenge, and betrayal from Lahore in the Punjab to
Karachi on the Arabian Sea, from the flesh trade to the Basmati rice
trade, and from high seriousness to low comedy as the sometimes
hapless, sometimes sympathetic, anti-hero is bruised and buffeted into
a reluctant understanding of the rules of a different and more
dangerous game.
Reactions of Early Readers
... a satisfying mix of intrigue, suspense,
humor, and non-gratuitous sex and violence.
Burns is working both sides of the fiction
street - a literary, but not intrusive, subtext and a mainstream genre
story that rocks.
an outrageous whitewash of immoral and
unethical behavior. To understand is not to forgive.
the war between the sexes highlighted by the
clash of cultures.
fully-developed characters only slightly
larger than life where the heroes (and heroines) are flawed, and the
villains are strangely attractive good savage stuff.
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