| Two brothers - one a
presidential press secretary, the other a maverick captain of a Navy destroyer - scramble
to prevent a Libyan plot to use chemical weapons against Israel and the United States in
this absorbing thriller.
Jim Schmidt is a
master of the spin. As White House press secretary, his job is to cajole, sweet-talk, and
otherwise persuade the nation's most powerful journalists to play a story the way the
White House wants it played. Bill Schmidt, Jim's younger brother, is equally
skillful, but in a different realm. He is the charismatic captain of the
USS
Winston Churchill and he leads an able but rambunctious crew with a penchant for
causing well-publicized "liberty incidents" around the Mediterranean.
Both men instinctively understand their jobs, but more
important, they understand how power works: He who controls the facts controls the
response. So when the United States learns of a Libyan plot to drop a planeload of
chemical weapons on the Israeli Knesset, the brothers-- thousands of miles apart--
unexpectedly find themselves working together to defeat the plan. Their first step
is to set "Circle William," a Navy phrase meaning to prepare for chemical, germ,
or nuclear attack.
As Jim huddles with the country's top defense and
intelligence officials to plot a viable strategy to prevent the strike, Bill, on the front
line of the crisis, prepares to implement the plan. Complicating their mission is
the inconvenient presence of Sue O'Dell, a smart Washington Post Style reporter
who wants to write a story on the commander and his notorious ship.
How the brothers counter the Libyan threat and how they
spin the story make Circle William as much a story of international terrorism as it is a
contemporary political thriller.
Drawing from his more than two decades in the U.S. Navy,
his work inside the Pentagon and from his tenure as an assistant White House press
secretary, Bill Harlow combines the insider's detail of Primary Colors with the technical
expertise of The Hunt for Red October. Harlow's Circle William
is as authentic and
as chilling as any news event and is an impressive debut by a writer with an intimate
knowledge of the workings of Washington, the military, and international terrorism. |