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The Piratization of Daniel Barnes
Daniel Barnes was a journalist sent to Somalia to report on the pirate happenings in 2008, at the time the Al-Shabaab terror organization was brutally consolidating its control over large swathes of Somali territory and implementing a barbaric version of sharia law. Daniel was kidnapped before he ever stepped foot in the state of anarchy; however, and was sold into slavery. He was sold to a warrior pirate who hoped to utilize Daniel’s journalism skills to gain himself notoriety with a world audience. At first, Daniel tried to escape his captors, but he would later hope to escape the man he had become . . .
Reviews
Kirkus Reviews

In McGlothlin’s debut novel, a lovelorn journalist becomes ensnared in the lives of modern-day pirates in Somalia.

Daniel Barnes has arrived in Mombasa, Kenya, from Washington, D.C., hoping to enter neighboring Somalia. Although he has minimal experience as a journalist, he plans to get a story that will not only make his career, but also convince his childhood sweetheart, Bally, to choose him over her fiance. No official transport will enter the war-torn nation, so Daniel must secure passage by boat. He eventually hires Capt. Zakia, who takes the journalist on his yacht. When pirates overtake the vessel, Daniel is knocked out and later awakens in a “five-by-five cell made of a heinous amalgamation of chicken [wire] and barbed wire.” After about six weeks, he’s driven to the Somali hinterland by associates of Amir Sharif, a man who helps kidnap victims get home. Daniel receives three months of regular food and exercise, but then he’s suddenly shackled and brought to a slave auction. There, a pirate captain, Sayyid, bids $20,000 for the strong looking white man and soon tells him, “Your story of me will put my picture on cereal box like Kobe Bryant.” McGlothlin’s unpredictable debut is a superb portrait of the bombed-out region surrounding Mogadishu, where, as Sayyid says, “death...is a sunset. It bring darkness but happen everyday.” It’s also a classic adventure story, during which chaos transforms the seemingly average protagonist into a formidable hero. The characters—from Sayyid’s crew members to a manipulative sheikh to World Health Organization medic Caitlin—all play specific roles in creating the new Daniel. Readers will grit their teeth at the severe narrative turns, including animal fights in a Roman-style arena and Daniel’s increasingly savage behavior to stay alive (including ear-biting, shooting, and harpooning). There’s great moral heft in the situations in which Sayyid tries to retain his “Somali Robin Hood” status while his Sharia-following brother, Yousef, demands that they work for Allah. The answer to the question of whether Daniel is “the cure or the cancer” for the pirate crew is an epic one.

A compelling, politically rich thriller.

The Columbia Review of Books and Film

The Piratization of Daniel Barnes by Alex McGlothlin The Piratization of Daniel Barnes by Alex McGlothlin is a unique and timely novel that brings to life the actual inner-workings and innermost feelings of true-to-life Islamic radicals by taking the reader into the most turbulent peak of Somali pirate activities.

In essence, the story centers on Daniel Barnes, a journalist arriving in Africa from Washington, DC in hopes of capturing a great, fame-worthy story, and instead ends up being captured by an infamous, glory-seeking Somali pirate. While the readers enjoy a secondary thread of a love story—after all, men always seek glory to impress, entice and earn the admiration of their love interest—the main thrust here is a violent yet psychologically intense thriller, with some elements of the Stockholm Syndrome (Daniel suffers, and then engages in, plenty of violent acts out of necessity and/or identification with his captors), and an exploration of the divide/overlap between Islamic faith and Islamic jihad.

The pirate captain, Sayyid, makes for a fascinating villain, who seeks not only profits, but global fame. In making us feel complex emotions about such an evil antagonist and his bloodthirsty cohorts—we occasionally get close to admiring Sayyid!—debut author McGlothlin writes with a surprisingly mature pen. Barnes’s journey through the horrors of Mogadishu and its multiple power-holders of dubious moral and noxious ideological colors transforms not only him but also the reader.

In summary, The Piratization of Daniel Barnes by Alex McGlothlin is a fast paced, action-packed thriller that transports the reader to pirate-ruled Somalia at the height of its violence, introduces realistic, fascinating and provocative characters, and ingeniously intertwines plotlines involving romance, good against evil, and international politics, all driven by the most potent motives of greed, fame, salvation, and survival. Highly recommended!

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