I read this after reading Brian Keenan's 'An Evil Cradling'. It seemed logical, to get the other half of the story.
but it is actually two more sides of the same story but from a very English perspective. Brian's Gaelic character is evident in his writing by comparison.
This juxtaposition of the two concurrent stories is a good device, but would have probably worked better with more concise or shorter chapters, which is the pattern it falls into in the concluding chapter -'Exile on Main Street'. It reads a like two concurrent books, in jumps and starts rather than one with a sense of flow.
The first thing to note then, is that Brian Keenan is a far better writer than either John or Jill McCarthy, Brian's book is a literary work as well as a testimony to endurance and strength of spirit. These stories are interesting on a humanitarian level, as view into extreme experiences and a retake on a turbulent time of modern World History of a very different kind. It is precisely this which impels this book and keeps the narrative going. And a good thing too! Whilst the inherent relationship subtext is evident the chapters in general are very long and meander a little into minutiae but as the book develops the perseverance is repaid leaving you with a respect and empathy for both authors. I was amazed at how well they remembered details actually despite my previous comment, particularly when you fully consider the severely limited and reduced life that John McCarthy was forced to live for 5 years. That they were willing to share such intimacies with the general public is a commendable, if questionable folly in itself but, I for one am grateful that they did.
The character, humanity and endurance of both parties is evident however the obvious villains of the piece, Islamic Jihad are joined by the British Press and Government; alongside John's account of captivity we also get to see from the home based English perspective from which the arrogant apathy of the then Tory Foreign Office's policy and the all too familiar insensitivity and fickleness of the British Press become obvious and odious.
Overall worth the read but an Evil Cradling is far, far better.
Now onto ' Taken on Trust' Terry Waite's story.