Trigger Point

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出版者:
作者:Glass, Matthew
出品人:
页数:416
译者:
出版时间:2012-3
价格:$ 28.25
装帧:
isbn号码:9780802119971
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具体描述

The year is 2018 and the current president, Thomas Paxton Knowles, decides to initiate a United States military operation in Uganda—called “Jungle Peace”—with the objective of eliminating the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA), a particularly nasty terrorist group that just recently slaughtered a group of doctors and American relief workers. The operation in Uganda is approved by a UN vote, though China—which has troops on the ground in neighboring Sudan—votes against it and sends two ships to shadow the movements of US naval forces in East African waters. Despite tensions with China, Knowles hopes that Jungle Peace will be a quick, clean operation that will, in the months preceding US midterm elections, add to the already wide popularity he and his fellow Republicans are enjoying as a result of the current economic boom.

On Wall Street, Ed Grey is about to lead his investment company, Red River, into some lucrative short-term bets. One of his stock traders has heard that the bank Fidelian has some losses it needs to declare, so the plan is to short Fidelian and three other banks in anticipation of a brief market correction, and thus make significant profits off of the short-term market dip in the banking sector. When the Fed Chairman makes statements about an imminent bubble that needs to be controlled, Wall Street interprets this as evidence that the financial sector is unstable, so lots of people start shorting Fidelian, and indeed its stock begins to decline. The Fed Chairman follows up with a series of statements intended to convey how the Fed is keeping a watchful eye on the market correction, but with each statement he is seen to be implying that the Fed is privy to evidence of instability in the financial sector; so Wall Street continues to short and sell the financial stocks, and the market decline grows more serious.

President Knowles’ administration realizes that this economic decline will hurt Republican chances in the midterms, so they begin investigating causes and ways of restoring market vitality. They discover that the People’s Investment Corporation (PIC), which is owned by the Chinese government, controls upwards of 25% of Fidelian stock, and they begin to worry that China may be intentionally causing Fidelian to fail in order to influence the US elections. Knowles asks the Chinese President Zhang to issue a statement declaring that China hasn’t been using economic assets to influence US politics, and, though it is true that China is innocent in this regard, Zhang can’t issue the statement for fear of appearing economically weak and under US influence.

The US economic situation continues to decline. Fidelian stock is plummeting and in order to avert economic collapse the US government orchestrates a deal for the other major banks to purchase Fidelian. The Fidelian stockholders—the PIC and company—ask for an outrageously high price, and the US banks instead make a reasonable though still high offer. Knowles calls up Zhang and lets him know that China must accept the deal, since there won’t be a better one and Fidelian must be bailed out in order to avoid economic repercussions that would hurt the inextricably linked Chinese and US economies. Nonetheless, Zhang’s advisors think Knowles is bluffing, simply trying to exert influence over Chinese decisions, so China rejects the purchase deal and Fidelian declares bankruptcy. The US economy tumbles into freefall.

Meanwhile, in Uganda, though Jungle Peace hasn’t been accruing many LRA casualties, the army locates a major LRA compound. Knowles approves an apache raid on the facility, but it’s botched, resulting in two US deaths and a further two soldiers being taken captive by the LRA and moved into Sudan. Eventually the POWs are located and the US sends in a contingent of helicopters to extract the two soldiers, but it turns out they’ve walked into a trap orchestrated by Chinese troops in Sudan, and the extraction team gets pinned down in a fortified complex. In retaliation, the US navy surrounds and effectively holds hostage the two Chinese ships that had been shadowing them in East African waters. At this provocation, China sends two battalions steaming for the African coast, and to match this imminent threat the US sends two of its own battalions steaming for the same location. With about 40 hours until the ships arrive, which will almost certainly initiate a battle and possibly a war, Chinese-US tensions are running astronomically high.

Knowles calls Zhang direct and tries to negotiate, asking for a deal where China releases the soldiers in Sudan and in return the US will release the ships, but Zhang refuses to make any deals: he demands that the US release the ships unconditionally. Knowles is confronted by the US ambassador to the UN who impresses upon him that the US foreign policy for negotiating with China has been wrong this whole time. The ambassador’s point is that the US continually demands things of China, but China is going to resist these demands because they need to defend the nearly equal global status that they’ve achieved. While the US may not like to admit it, China has become an economic equal and is—with their massive control of US stocks—in a legitimate position to compete with and influence the US. So Knowles is advised that if he wishes to avoid all out war with China, he’s going to have to make some sort of concession that allows China to prove its establishment as a global power. Knowles then issues a private statement to Zhang informing him that the US will release the ships then an hour later go in to extract its men from Sudan. Because this statement is private, it maintains the appearance that, when the US releases the ships, China has forced the US to concede. Things go according to plan: the ships are released and China lets the US rescue its men without incident.

The novel ends with a sense of global progress: President Knowles makes a speech that publicly recognizes China’s status as a political equal and reaches out to create a US-China alliance that will work to lead the globe into the future.

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这本书最让我感到惊艳的地方在于其对“边缘群体”的细腻描摹。它没有采取批判或同情的姿态,而是以一种近乎纪录片式的客观视角,展现了那些生活在社会夹缝中的人们的生存状态和内心世界。这些角色的塑造立体而复杂,他们既有令人愤慨的缺陷,也有令人动容的光辉。作者成功地营造了一种“局外人”的视角,让你得以窥见一个不常被外界关注的真实角落。这种对社会肌理的深入挖掘,使得故事的现实基础异常牢固,即使情节发展到极致,读者依然能感受到那份根植于现实的荒谬感和悲凉感。阅读体验是震撼的,因为它强迫你跳出舒适区,去理解那些与你生活轨迹完全不同的人们的逻辑和情感回路。它不是简单的消遣,而是一次深入社会腹地的、充满启发性的旅程。

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这本书的叙事结构之精巧,简直令人拍案叫绝。它采用了非传统的时间线处理方式,让过去、现在和那些模糊不清的“可能未来”交织在一起,形成一种环形叙事的效果。初读时可能会感到些许迷惘,但当那些看似零散的片段最终汇聚成一个宏大的图景时,那种豁然开朗的震撼感是无与伦比的。作者在处理信息释放的节奏上有着大师级的掌控力,总是在你以为快要抓住真相时,又抛出一个新的谜团,将你推向更深的迷雾之中。我不得不说,作者对细节的关注到了偏执的程度,从一个旧物件的摆放位置,到一句无意中的口头禅,都可能成为解开后续谜团的关键钥匙。这种需要高度集中注意力的阅读体验,对于寻求智力挑战的读者来说,绝对是一场盛宴。它考验的不是你的阅读速度,而是你的观察力和联想能力。

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坦白讲,我原本以为这会是一部标准的悬疑小说,但读完后发现它远远超出了这个范畴,更像是一部关于“选择的代价”的哲学探讨。作者的文笔干净利落,几乎没有一句废话,每一个场景、每一段对话都承载着巨大的信息量和潜在的冲突。我尤其佩服作者构建世界观的功力,即便是虚构的背景,其内部逻辑也严丝合缝,让人信服。书中对道德困境的描绘非常尖锐,没有给出任何轻松的答案,迫使读者去直面那些我们通常选择回避的问题:底线在哪里?为了生存可以牺牲多少?这种直击灵魂的拷问,使得阅读过程既痛苦又充满收获。我个人更倾向于那些情节推进缓慢,但细节打磨到极致的作品,而这部恰恰符合我的胃口。它不是那种让你一口气读完就丢开的书,它更像一块需要细细咀嚼的陈年佳酿,每品一口,都能发现新的风味层次。

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这本书的叙事节奏简直像是一场精心设计的迷宫,让你在层层叠叠的线索中迷失方向,却又忍不住想深究下去。作者对人物心理的刻画入木三分,那种在灰色地带挣扎求生的感觉,隔着书页都能让人感同身受。特别是主角在面对那些看似无解的困境时,那种近乎绝望的挣扎与最终爆发出惊人韧性的对比,简直是教科书级别的戏剧张力。我特别欣赏作者如何巧妙地运用环境描写来烘托人物的心境,那种冷峻、压抑的氛围,仿佛成为了角色内心世界的延伸。故事的推进并非线性叙事,而是充满了跳跃和暗示,需要读者自己去拼凑完整的画面,这种互动性极大地增强了阅读的沉浸感。读完之后,那种意犹未尽的感觉非常强烈,总觉得某些细节被刻意地隐藏了起来,引人深思,让人不得不反复回味那些关键的转折点,思考作者真正的用意。这本书无疑是对人性复杂性的一次深刻探索,远超一般情节驱动的小说范畴。

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从文学性的角度来看,这本书的语言功底极其深厚,充满了一种冷峻的美感。作者的描述语言往往是克制而精准的,很少使用浮夸的形容词,而是通过对场景和动作的冷静捕捉,自然而然地营造出一种强烈的戏剧张力。我特别喜欢书中那些富有象征意义的意象,它们像暗语一样贯穿始终,为故事增添了丰富的解读空间。与其说这是一个关于事件的故事,不如说它是一份关于“失落”与“重建”的深刻注解。它探讨了身份的脆弱性,以及当一个人被剥夺了所有外在标签后,他如何定义自己。这种内省式的探索,让整本书的基调显得深沉而富有重量。阅读过程中,我多次停下来,仅仅是为了回味某一个句子或者某个场景的氛围,它不是那种快餐式的娱乐读物,而是需要你投入全部心神去品味的作品。

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