(35. – 922.) Legitimate Business by Michael Niemann – An opening to remember:
There is no rush hour in a refugee camp. No jobs to get to,
no appointments to keep. Just waiting. Waiting to go home. The Zam Zam camp for
internally displaced persons, some ten miles south of El Fasher in Darfur,
Sudan, was no different. The closest Zam Zam got to a rush hour was when the
food aid arrived.
Then a sniper, Garreth Campbell, shoots
an elder, a female police woman from Bangladesh and a young woman. He calmly
drives away.
At the same time, the spring of
2010, in Dusseldorf Valentin Vermeulen, an investigator for the OIOS (United
Nations Office of Internal Oversight Services) is completing a short vacation.
He checks for fraud in U.N. operations around the world. Having stirred up the
bureaucracy in New York by reporing on possible fraud by the son of the
Secretary General he has been designated to travel to the distant missions of
the U.N. as far from New York as possible. While exiled he remains stubbornly
resolute in pursuing fraud.
Before leaving Dusseldorf he has a
difficult conversation with his daughter, Gaby. He has not seen her in 8 years
and is attempting a reconciliation. His marriage had broken down and Gaby did
not handle it well. She ended up using heroin, and he, after tracking her down,
forced Gaby into rehab. He eventually left Belgium for the U.N.
Back in South Sudan, Priya Choudhury
is intent on investigating the murder of her friend Ritu Roy. They were members
of a 140 woman detachment of Bangladeshi policewomen sent to Zam Zam.
Shortly after the killings Vermeulen
arrives in Darfur to conduct an audit of the United Nations/African Union
Mission (UNAMID).
His aide, Winston Wambai, is a
member of the Kenyan military peacekeeprs.
Legitmate
Business has such a promising start. There
are challenging issues with regard to refugees and war in the region. Niemann
starts exploring the frustrations of the U.N. personnel in a war zone where
they are barely tolerated. Yet he does not make the conflict as simple as Arabs
v. Africans.
Unfortunately the plot then starts
descending into an average thriller with a trip to a camp of one of the warring
factions. Vermeulen and Choudhury want to interview Amina, a young girl who saw
the shooter. Unwanted and univited at the camp the journey stretches
credibility as they demand of the commander that they be able to talk to her.
Later there are a series of hair
breadth escapes that are the staple of modern thrillers.
Legitmate
Business is a competent thriller I lament
that it could have been much more. A book in the mode of John Le Carre was
within Niemann’s grasp. I thought of The
Night Manager where a principled young man takes on an international arms
dealer. There is also shifty arms dealing in Legitimate Business.
Unlike The Night Manager the bad guys are purely evil in Legitimate Business.
Niemann has the knowledge and imagination
to have avoided thriller violence to solve the mystery. Instead, he chose the
approach of Indiana Jones. Vermeulen is an intelligent hero who was limited to
being an action hero.
What did surprise me was an ending
that was a return to real world reality. The beginning and the end showed what
Niemann is capable of writing.
If you love the current Hollywood
approach to thrillers you will enjoy Legitimate
Business. I hope Niemann’s next book pursues issues through the book as
well as thrills.
I can see what you mean, Bill, about the potential this story had. It certainly sounds as though it could've been a truly fine novel. And even as it is, I'm glad that Neimann didn't gloss over the complexities of working with refugees. Still, I can see how you'd be frustrated that this didn't develop into the excellent novel it might have been.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. Niemann has a lot of knowledge of the U.N. and Africa that I appreciated.
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