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Traveling with a group of American security contractors—mercenaries, or mercs—award-winning reporter Steve Fainaru reveals in gritty detail the men who live by Big Boy Rules.
For this mordant dispatch from one of the Iraq War's seamiest sides, Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post correspondent Fainaru embedded with some of the thousands of "private security contractors" who chauffeur officials, escort convoys and add their own touch of mayhem to the conflict. Exempt from Iraqi law and oversight by the U.S. government, which doesn't even record their casualties, the mercenaries, Fainaru writes, play by "Big Boy Rules"-which often means no rules at all as they barrel down highways in the wrong direction, firing on any vehicle in their path. (His report on the Blackwater company, infamous for killing Iraqi civilians and getting away with it, is meticulous and chilling.) Fainaru's depiction of the mercenaries' crassness and callousness is unsparing, but he sympathizes with these often inexperienced, badly equipped hired guns struggling to cope with a dirty war. Nor is he immune to the romance of the soldier of fortune, especially in his somewhat bathetic portrait of Jon Coté, Iraq War veteran and lost soul who joined the fly-by-night Crescent Security Group and was kidnapped by insurgents. Fainaru's vivid reportage makes the mercenary's dubious motives and chaotic methods a microcosm of a misbegotten war. (Nov. 17)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. More Reviews and RecommendationsSteve Fainaru is a foreign correspondent for the Washington Post, where he covered the war in Iraq from 2004 to 2007. In addition to the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting, he received the Overseas Press Club’s Hal Boyle Award for best newspaper or wire-service reporting from abroad for his stories on private security contractors. He was a Pulitzer finalist in 2006 for his coverage of U.S. troops as the insurgency in Iraq intensified.
Fainaru is also the coauthor of The Duke of Havana: Baseball, Cuba, and the Search for the American Dream. He lives in El Cerrito, California.
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04/20/2009: This book is nothing short of chilling. And amazing. Just when I thought I couldn't think any worse of the Iraq war and the incompetence of the Bush administration, this book shows me that the mainstream media hasn't scratched the surface on the truth. If anything, they've sugarcoated it. Fainaru's writing is incrediblly poignant and touching, particularly considering the personal tragedies he was enduring at the time. This book should be required reading for any flag-waving teabagger who has even the remotest fond memory of the pathetic Bush administration. This shows us another dark side to a poorly-planned war and painfully exposes so many U.S. shortcomings. I learned a lot. And God bless you, Steve Fainaru. May you recover from your emotional wounds and rediscover personal happiness.