A Novel
By Pearl Abraham
Random House. 272 pp. $25
Reviewed by Rhonda Dickey
In this slim novel, Pearl Abraham traces the path of a sweet, upper-middle-class kid from surfer dude to American Taliban.
John Jude Parish is loosely modeled on John Walker Lindh, who was captured just after the start of the U.S. war in Afghanistan, and whose comfortable background provoked as much anger in this country as his actions.
But American Taliban is clearly a work of the imagination, taking the outlines of a true story and creating something else. Abraham sets herself a real challenge: Most readers aren't going to approach this novel with a lot of sympathy for a young man - even an innocent, endearing one - who falls in with people who attack this country. Yet she does manage to draw a character who evokes sympathy, even as he drifts from inexplicable situations into unconscionable ones.