From Kirkus Reviews:
Here, Jacobsen, an American hospital administrator held hostage by the Islamic Jihad for 17 months, details the hell of captivity and questions the good faith of US efforts to free the remaining hostages. Writing with veteran author Astor (The Last Nazi, 1985, etc.), Jacobsen tells of his capture in May 1985 while director of the American Univ. of Beirut's Medical Center, and of his ensuing ordeal: his captors' petty humiliations (false promises of release; constant surveillance, even at the toilet); his frustration when Reagan broadcast a no-negotiation-with-terrorists policy; his terror when an American newscaster's speculation that Jacobsen was encoding secret messages in videotaped statements resulted in a savage beating. And he writes also of what sustained him and his fellow hostages: close friendship (in Jacobsen's case, especially with AP correspondent Terry Anderson, still held hostage after six years), plus faith and twice-daily religious services conducted by a hostage priest and minister. Throughout, Jacobsen questions US hostage and terrorism policies, arguing the urgency of saving the hostages and asserting that many rescue and negotiation options have been and are being ignored. (Released in November 1986 as part of the infamous arms-for-hostages trade with Iran, Jacobsen praises Oliver North and his cohorts for heroism.) The author also condemns the naked villainy of Islamic extremist groups, but fails to examine whether Mideast problems have any roots in US policies. An understandably angry, and effective, polemic/memoir, likely to catch the attention--and maybe even prick the consciences--of D.C. powerbrokers. -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Library Journal:
Americans, failing to hear the cry of desperation from people radicalized by their own suffering as pawns of international politics, cannot grasp why good and innocent people are taken hostage. Jacobsen, the former director of the American University of Beirut Hospital, dedicates this account of his 532-day captivity to all victims of terrorism and their families, including hundreds of thousands of Lebanese brutalized by recent events. Held with Ben Weir and others, he gives inside information on why some hostages died, saying that both Colonel Higgens and William Buckley weren't executed as generally believed but died accidentally. He explains why Terry Anderson has been held for so long and describes how the hostages developed bonds with each other despite infighting as the U.S. refusal to bargain for their release made it the common enemy. As in Ben and Carol Weirs' Hostage Bound, Hostage Free (Westminster, 1987), bitterness remains. Informative and exciting reading for general collections. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/91-- Louise Leonard, Univ. of Florida Libs., Gainesville
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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