For me to give HUNTED a 5+ star rating, even though this sub-genre of thrillers is not my usual cup of tea, demonstrates just how well-written it is. It is one of the best books I’ve read this year.
Abir Mukherjee is the author of the Wyndham and Banerjee historical series set in India. Because I thoroughly enjoyed the one book I read from that series, I keep checking to see if my library has acquired the others. It hasn’t, but it recently got HUNTED, his latest novel, a fast-moving terrorism conspiracy thriller. I had read the Goodreads reviews, marked it as a “possibility” but wasn’t greatly enthusiastic; although I like thrillers, the terrorism conspiracy ones are a sub-genre that I generally avoid.
Brief Synopsis
From the beginning, the reader is aware that there is a terrorism group that includes Muslims—and possibly others—planting bombs in strategic places. For one conspirator, Yasmin, something goes wrong, although we’re not sure exactly what, except that she didn’t expect to die as a suicide bomber. After many people are killed in the shopping mall bombing, FBI agent Shreya Mistry takes over the investigation. It is one week before the U.S. presidential election.
We do get a brief look at the conspiracy group through the POV of Greg, who is a member of this group but having doubts about its intentions.
After following Shreya’s investigation for awhile, the action shifts to London, where Sajid Khan is arrested because the FBI investigation discovered that his daughter, Aliyah, accompanied the suicide bomber on a trip to the U.S. Sajid is distraught; he thought his daughter had gone to Japan. Then Sajid is confronted by an American woman, Carrie, who says that her son, Greg, is with Aliyah and others, and consequently in danger of being hunted down and killed by American authorities searching for the conspiracy group. Carrie wants Sajid to accompany her to the U.S. and find them before they are killed.
Complex? Indeed. This is just the start of a plot full of twists and turns as we follow the POV’s of Shreya, Sajid, and Greg.
Character Development
The plot is complex but the reason I couldn’t put the book down was the depth of character development taking place as the plot followed its whiplash pattern. My favourite was Shreya, an agent who has been shifted from one office to another because she doesn’t adhere to team player rules, and sometimes has difficulty explaining her inner thoughts, the reasoning behind her “outside the box” thinking.
She could and did follow orders, just not the dumb ones.
No, it was better to take the crap; to listen to the man in authority. That’s what a smart woman always did, wasn’t it? Defer to the man, even if he was just the right side of mediocre.
sometimes, in the heat of the moment, the words got tied up in Shreya’s mouth. The act of spelling out her thoughts to another person became a challenge in itself, like wading through quicksand or pushing water uphill.
Sajid, also, was a very sympathetic character, caught up in situation where he wanted, above all, to protect his family. Even Greg, the conspirator, elicited sympathy as his story unfolded.
As well, minor characters are well described, not the stereotypical cliches often found in fast-moving action thrillers.
Writing Style
As my friends on Goodreads know, one thing that can turn me off fast is a poor writing style. Mukherjee is a superb writer, as he already has demonstrated in the Wyndham/Bannerjee series. In HUNTED I was immediately struck by how well he used the “show don’t tell” technique. Here is just one example:
Sweat glistened on Sajid Khan’s forehead. He wiped at it with the fingers of one hand.
Political Controversy
As mentioned above, the timeline is set one week before the U.S. Presidential election, and this is constantly a background issue. Are the conspirators trying to influence the outcome?
The two candidates have fictional names but are remarkably similar to the real candidates in the current election (albeit with some definite differences in addition to the fictional names). Given the time period when the book was written, the characteristics of one potential candidate were predictable, but the other was less likely, so either the author has incredible prognostication ability or it was just a lucky coincidence.
I think the subtle political views underlying the plot structure are going to turn off some American readers. Mukherjee conveys a criticism of both sides of the contemporary division in today’s society, and particularly, of the U.S. system structure.
But for the discerning reader, this is a must-read. Highly recommended! A+
Thanks to the Greater Victoria Public Library for providing the ebook that I read.