The Towers: A Dan Lenson Novel of 9/11 (Dan Lenson Novels)
The Towers: A Dan Lenson Novel of 9/11 (Dan Lenson Novels) book cover

The Towers: A Dan Lenson Novel of 9/11 (Dan Lenson Novels)

Hardcover – August 30, 2011

Price
$12.06
Format
Hardcover
Pages
320
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312613013
Dimensions
6.46 x 1.16 x 9.42 inches
Weight
1.1 pounds

Description

"An involving, skillfully told tale of the after-emotions of 9/11 and the internal conflicts experienced by U.S. personnel in the hunt for bin Laden." -- Kirkus Reviews DAVID POYER’s military career included service in the Atlantic, Mediterranean, Arctic, Caribbean, Persian Gulf, and Pacific. He lives onxa0Eastern Shore of Virginia with his wife and their daughter, with whom he explores the Bay and Atlantic coast in their sloop, Water Spirit . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. SEPTEMBER 11, 20015:15 A.M., ARLINGTON, VIRGINIAxa0xa0IT was still dark. Yet not so long before sunrise that Dan couldn’t make out the trees through the window by the breakfast table. The back of the house overlooked the creek that ran through the ravine above which the home had been built.They lived across the river from Washington, in the suburbs that had grown up along the Metro. A brick colonial with flagstone walks and three bedrooms and a family room in the basement, though they didn’t really have a family, aside from his daughter. Nan was grown up now, in grad school. Maples and elms and yellow poplars shaded the lawn. Blair had furnished it, mostly from the antique shops she made him stop at whenever they drove east to visit her parents. Other pieces were from her family’s estate, things her mom and dad had let go when they’d redecorated.A far nicer home than he’d grown up in, and it felt strange having so much room, so many things he didn’t need. But when he felt this, he reminded himself of those who’d sacrificed so much so he could have this excess, this luxury, this safety. He still kept a pistol in the house, but didn’t need it in arm’s reach anymore.“They really want you there this early?” he asked his wife.Blair sipped coffee and looked at her watch. She was in a severe suit and black pumps. A light coat hung over the back of her chair. “They want me at National at six sharp. But I won’t be flying commercial.”Dan grinned. She always called it National, never Ronald Reagan. “Charter?”“Their own jet. A limo’ll meet me at JFK.”“Sweet. And—when’ll you be back?”“Day after tomorrow. Maybe I’ll see a show, if I can get tickets.”They drank coffee and gazed out the bay window at the backyard. The hollyhocks and peonies were long gone, the four-o’clocks wouldn’t open till afternoon, but the white blooms of nicotiana seemed to glow even in the half dark.“What are you doing today?”“Headed in to the Building. See a classmate. Then I’m supposed to look in on Barry Niles.”She wrinkled her nose. “The one who shot you down for your promotion?”Dan shoved eggs around on his plate. No one was guaranteed promotion, especially at the O-6 level. But he’d hoped. “ He didn’t shoot me down.”“Oh, he stacked the deck. With the other admirals on the board. He’s always spoken against you, right? Kept you from getting another command, after Horn ?”“The proceedings are sealed.”“Dan, you’re the most decorated officer in the Navy. Navy Cross. Silver Star. And the Congressional, for God’s sake. You’ve pulled their chestnuts out of the fire time and again. And they pass you over for captain.” She raised a finger. “Wouldn’t have happened if I was still at OSD.”“That would not have helped. The Navy keeps outsiders out of promotion. SecNav, just maybe. SecDef, no.” But he kept his tone nonargumentative.Blair had taken the November election hard. It meant she was out in the cold; a new administration, a new party in charge. That was why she was going to New York.“What precisely do these Cohn, Kennedy guys do, again?”“I told you. Global financial services. Specialized equity and capital markets for institutional clients. Real estate private equity.” She eyed him humorlessly. “None of which means squat to you, right?”“It sounds likexa0… it should pay.”“Oh, it will, Dan. I could cubbyhole at SAIC until the next election, but this’ll build our net worth. We may not see much of each other, unless you decide to come to New York with me. But we’ll come out of it with significantly enhanced personal value.”“You’re sure they’re hiring?”“Good people are always hard to get,” she said without a trace of modesty, false or otherwise. “How much longer do you have? Now you’ve been passed over?”“June fifteenth is my punch-out date.”“Have you thought about my suggestion?”She’d told him to call his old teacher Dr. Edward Ferenczi, the new president’s national security adviser. Which would make it interesting, Dan working for one party while she was biding her time waiting to come back with the other. “I don’t know. I’m still thinking about it.”“Don’t wait, if you want a responsible position.” Her tone was tentative, as if she didn’t want to jab a tender place. “Good God, is that the time?” She grabbed her coat, kissed his cheek, gave his chest a quick raking scratch through the open bathrobe. “See you Thursday.”He was about to let her go with that, but something made him get up. A faint unease out of nowhere. “I’ll go to the door with you.”The garage door groaned as it rolled up. He eyed the chains, thinking, grease. He caught her smile, a lifted hand as she backed down the drive, then craned around, checking her six before rolling out into the street. A pale rose glow fanned slowly out beyond the trees, like a peacock’s tail.When she was gone he stripped the plastic wrapper off the Post, looking at the weather first. Clear skies; she should have a nice flight. The headlines. The new SecDef had declared war on bloat at the Pentagon. He was trimming the staff fifteen percent to start with and twenty percent more in a year. Page two, more criticism of the new missile defense program. He read this article to the end.Judges and prosecutors were being murdered in Colombia. NATO was pulling out of Macedonia amid predictions of sectarian massacres. He shuddered, remembering a concrete shed filled with corpses, the buzz of fat flies nestling into mutilated eye sockets. When the Balkans went, they went all the way, tumbling straight through war into the abyss of savagery. More deaths in Iraq too.He lifted his gaze, thoughts freezing behind gray eyes. Whatever he read, faces floated up. Images, smells, tastes of numb terror and desperate hope and, sometimes, incredible heroism.He’d worn a uniform since he’d been seventeen. The Navy had been home, career, professionxa0… everything. But it ate its young. Destroyed marriages. Relationships. The years had shot past one after the other at sea, or busy ashore. He’d done everything he’d set out to do. Even commanded a destroyer, though not for long enough.You could stay in for a few years, after being passed over. But what was the point? Might as well do desk work somewhere they’d actually pay. Maybe not as well as they were going to pay Blair, but better than the Navy.The trouble was, he’d never wanted to do anything else.xa0Copyright © 2011 by David Poyer Read more

Features & Highlights

  • After surviving the attacks on September 11, 2001, Dan Lenson finds himself quickly drawn into a covert SEAL team in search of the terrorists responsible. Their mission: kill Osama Bin Laden.
  • On the morning of September 11, 2001, Commander Dan Lenson is visiting the Pentagon, and his wife is at a job interview at the World Trade Center. In the action-packed scenes that follow, Dan fights his way through flames and destruction to safety, and tries to reach his wife on her cell phone, but the terrifying few seconds before they're cut off do nothing to calm his fears.Dan immediately becomes involved in the military reaction to the attack. His SEAL team is assigned to Task Force Rhino, a mission that takes him to Afghanistan and the borders of Pakistan in order to hunt down, capture, or kill Osama bin Laden and other senior members of the Taliban government and al Qaeda leadership. The 13th Dan Lenson novel,
  • The Towers
  • is a fascinating, accurate depiction of the events of September 11 and the military response, informed by sources in the Navy, the SEALS, the NCIS, and the author's own military experience. Full of fast-paced sequences and heart-pumping drama, David Poyer takes the reader into the center of the action and face-to-face with the terrorist enemy.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(94)
★★★★
25%
(78)
★★★
15%
(47)
★★
7%
(22)
23%
(72)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Technothriller? Or chick lit?

This book has a tortured point-of-view. Poyer can't seem to decide whether he, and most of his characters, are Bush-lied-people-died liberals or something a little closer to the norm for military and security people. Despite his generally good writing he never gets much traction in the marketplace, and this could be why.

Every Bush Derangement Syndrome hobbyhorse is in here: Allusions to Bush looking like a monkey. To his being dazed and confused on September 11, to the U.S. being in thrall to religious fanatics, to this being a war for oil, to steer money to firms like Halliburton. Or about "religious idiots", which lumps Pentecostals and Southern Baptists, Chasids and monks, in with Al Qaeda's Islamofascists. Poyer hints Bin Laden's killing was held off so that he could serve as a rallying point for the Coalition.

CIA agents are presented as obnoxious, drunk boogeymen whose real goal is ramped-up domestic spying. And there's the horrible persecution American Muslims suffered after September 11, which would be worth writing about had it actually happened. Which it didn't: Dirty looks in the street, government ears listening to imams' Friday mosque sermons and some roundups of Egyptians without visas do not a Kristallnacht make. Passages where the characters, meanwhile, have "let's get those guys" feelings, seem forced and obligatory rather than heartfelt.

Which is too bad, because the ground covered is worthwhile. Lenson is at the Pentagon on 9/11 and wife Blair Titus is at the World Trade Center, and we get a harrowing fictional account of both attacks. We see the cat and mouse games played in Yemen tracking Al Qaeda while Yemen's government plays both sides. We see the strategic and command element of the Afghan war inside tent cities sheltering the lead edge of all the intelligence and strategy America can bring to bear. And we get the SEALs-eye view of the fighting. These all lend a realistic feel for the War on Terror as it looked on September 11 and the next few months.

SEAL Teddy Oberg's passages are the best, but even here Poyer has problems. He can't resist casting his most engaged warrior, at the center of the book's best action sequences, as a vile and self-centered jerk whose only redeeming quality is his fighting ability. His first scene shows him date-raping a starlet in Hollywood while working his way through some combat-caused PTSD; there's not much question who Poyer thinks his audience is, but you have to wonder why he thinks they'll keep reading this and view Oberg sympathetically after that.

The American theater commander is twice referred to as the subject of sexual harassment complaints. With no link to characters or subplots, why is this even here? Other than Poyer's apparent agenda, that is.

I'm dubious about FBI agent Aisha ar-Rahim because I can't decide whether Poyer is more interested in her as a Triple Crown identity-politics symbol (black, female, a Muslim) or because wearing a burka with a gun and body armor underneath lets her sneak around Yemen unobserved, which is halfway interesting. Plus the Arabic-speaking agent can observe how dumb and culturally insensitive all those white guys she works with, are.

Lenson, meanwhile, has never been that likeable a hero. It's hard to put my finger on exactly why this is. He has good manners, he's not a jerk, but has few friends. I don't know about you, but I like my action heroes, as they make enemies up the command chain because of their integrity and independence, to make friends around them based on their merits, courage and regular-guyness.

Lenson is received well by those he meets, but remains distant from them. He has no insouciance, which would make him better company through a dozen action novels. Not every action hero has that or needs it; Horatio Hornblower doesn't have it, but then his duty-driven inner torment is central to his development and in tune with English character.

I tend to look forward to each new visit with a series action hero. You never get tired of Jack Aubrey or Richard Sharpe, but Lenson, his Medal of Honor notwithstanding, is a pill. Despite being developed through a dozen novels by a decent writer, he's a two-dimensional prig, amplified by a duty-honor-country commercial concluding each story where Poyer tries to justify why Lenson would stay in the Navy despite getting put through the bureaucratic wringer for having done the right thing.

Poyer has apparently created him to be appealing to a liberal career-shark like Blair Titus -- the only military man she, or the readers like her, would consider marrying. One who thinks the CIA are scum. One who's seemingly fought the Navy more than he has foreign enemies. One who may not actually exist. Is this a technothriller? Or chick-lit, featuring a date-rape by a protagonist at the outset?

Poyer needs to figure out who his audience is. The people's he writing for don't read technothrillers. Maybe he thinks if he hates on America enough, they will. But really, do they believe in duty, honor and country?
7 people found this helpful
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Another awesome read!!

Once again Mr. Poyer outdoes himself. A great work of fiction intertwined with real life. I couldn't put it down once I started. It gives in depth descriptions of what these people in the towers probably went through. It was also very descriptive of the search for Bin Laden. Mr. Poyer makes you feel like you are there in the middle of the hunt. His research of his subjects is phenominal. You can tell he spends endless time researching, as well as, using what he has learned in his service to this country in the US NAVY. I recommend this book and author that enjoys naval/armed services adventures. I can't wait for the next one in the series!!
4 people found this helpful
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A Most Pleasant Surprise

I'm a big fan of the Lenson series but avoided The Towers for months. Why? I could not imagine how this subject could be treated well or honestly or even constructively, and I sure didn't want to put up with any mindless militaristic flag-waving. I should have had a little faith ...

The unexpected strength of this novel is Poyer's recreation of these events from within the actual time-line. All the fears, paranoia, assumptions, patriotism and passion of the event and its aftermath unfold again, and we rediscover how emotionally and militarily unprepared we were for it, and to respond intelligently and responsibly. Sacrificing no sense of outrage or anger, and fully--if briefly--immersing us in the attacks themselves, Poyer moves on to the aftermath and reactions, both personal and national. And he brings back many of our favorite characters from previous Lenson novels to fill out the many necessary points of view.

Far from being the trial I had feared, The Towers is in many ways the best novel of the Lenson series. I can't recommend it highly enough.
3 people found this helpful
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Schedule

The service is great. Schedule was met.
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The Towers

Good read. Great service.
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Five Stars

no
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... got a little confusing but it was still a good read.

At times the book got a little confusing but it was still a good read.
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What a Day, May we never forget

David puts some new info concerning the towers calamity. As always his man continues to develop with new crisis adventure. Dan had ought to have seriously white hair or no hair at all by now. I have all Poyers books and every couple of years in the reading I find a lot of enjoyment. Thanks again for the hours of credible crisis drama.