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Hardcover The Secret Keeper Book

ISBN: 0525951024

ISBN13: 9780525951025

The Secret Keeper

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

One man's search for the truth in war-torn Sierra Leone, where the rules of civilized society don't apply... Journalist Danny Kellerman receives an urgent letter from an ex-lover in Sierra Leone, where he once was a war correspondent. But it's already too late; she's been murdered in a roadside robbery. Danny returns to Freetown, where his investigation uncovers secrets that shed a shocking light on the woman he though he knew-and reveals a hidden...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A worth while book

War time journalist, Danny Kellerman receives a letter in the mail from an ex-lover. Her name is Maria Consuela Tirado. Maria worked in Africa as an aid worker. Inside the envelope is a note from Maria asking for Danny's help. Unfortunately as Danny is reading the letter, Maria is already dead. Danny books the first flight out of London to Africa. He has to know what happened to Maria. Once in Africa, Danny is greeted by an old friend, Kam. When Danny learns that Maria was murdered, his reporter instincts kick in. Danny is on the trail of one of the biggest stories of his career. Mr. Harris's experience as a journalist covering the Sierra Leone war in Africa really was the meat that made The Secret Keeper so wonderfully good. His first hand knowledge of basing this book on what he saw, really made this story come alive. Instantly, I was transported to Africa...following in Danny's footsteps every step of the way. This book switched back and forth between the past and the present and it did it very well. Mr. Harris put real emotions to his characters. They were not one dimensional. Anyone looking to read a really good book that has adventure, romance, great characters, and a author who knows how to write...then you have to check out The Secret Keeper by Paul Harris.

Sacrifice the One, Save Many

The Secret Keeper by Paul Harris does not read like a debut novel, but like a well-engineered corkscrew ride through the African heat and the deep recesses of our humanity and morality. In the early 1990s, civil war began in Sierra Leone--a former British colony ripe with diamond mines--as rebels recruited students and children to fight against the government for more than a decade. The brutality present in the nation at this time comes across vividly in the pages of The Secret Keeper, which readers can easily attribute to the author's personal experience. It is apparent that those images stuck with Harris as he was writing his debut novel. Danny Kellerman is a journalist in London whose first foreign assignment takes him to war-torn Sierra Leone. Once in Africa, he is immersed in the haphazard warfare between the Sierra Leone government, the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), and eventually the British government. Danny meets Maria Tirado, falls in love, and breaks the story of a lifetime about saving former child soldiers, but once the assignment ends he must return to his London life. His content existence is soon disrupted by a hand-written letter from his lost love, Maria, who begs him to return and help her. Along the way, he reconnects with some of his old acquaintances, including his driver Kam and Ali Alhoun. A synopsis cannot do justice to this well-crafted novel about a war-torn nation and the impact it has on its own inhabitants, the world, and the individuals caught in its web. Readers will find themselves biting their fingernails as Danny digs deeper into Maria's secrets. But she is not the only character with secrets in this novel. Danny and the nation of Sierra Leone have a number of secrets for readers to unravel, stare at in astonishment, and almost wish they were left hidden. Harris' The Secret Keeper will have readers reaching for the "[...]" as they rapidly make their way through this drama. Danny's moral compass is tested time and again, while Ali and others stick to strategies that ensure not only their survival but that they come out ahead of others. The Secret Keeper is one of the best novels I've read this year, and it will twist readers' emotions, ring them out to dry, and soak up the remainder of their tears. Is the old conundrum of "sacrificing one for the benefit of the many" the way in which societies should operate? Should we determine our best course of action from this starting point? Read The Secret Keeper to find out how Danny Kellerman and his compatriots resolve these questions.

THE SECRET KEEPER by Paul Harris

Freetown, Sierra Leone is a haunted place for Danny Kellerman. He was sent to Freetown as a war correspondent in 2000--during the civil war--and it was the defining moment of his life, both professionally and personally. He met and fell in love with an American woman, Maria Tirado, who operated an orphanage for child soldiers, and realized a professional dream. It is four years later and Danny is back in London. He lives with his current girlfriend, but his life has slipped into one of self-pity and loss. His job is unfulfilling and his personal relationships, specifically the relationship with his girlfriend and father are breaking down into sullen desperation. Danny is a haunted man. His past haunts him. Freetown haunts him, as does the loss of Maria. Then one morning Danny receives a handwritten note from Maria. She is in trouble and asks Danny for help. She asks him to come to Freetown. He is stunned. It has been four years since they have spoken, now this. He decides to call her, but when he begins the search for a telephone number he finds an article about her death. She was murdered in Freetown three days earlier. This plea for help prods Danny into action. He convinces his editor to send him to Sierra Leone to do a piece on the recovery of the nation after its civil war, but what he really wants is to investigate Maria's murder. When he returns to Freetown he finds the place nearly unrecognizable. The two sides of the civil war share power, and while the economy is thriving, the past is a cloying danger no one wants to revisit, and there is a simmering anger and fear in the city. And no one, on either side, wants to investigate Maria's murder: what's done is done. THE SECRET KEEPER is a literary thriller that is stunning in its simplicity and power. The story is haunting and melancholy. It is told in two separate time lines. The first is in the year 2004 and it chronicles Danny's search for answers to Maria's death, and the second is his original trip to Sierra Leone in 2000 as a newspaper war correspondent. The story and prose is saturated with regret and darkness. There is an overriding sense of fear and loss. Danny is a man who has defined himself by one moment of weakness--a weakness that did not seem like weakness when it occurred, but over the months and years that followed it has dragged Danny down with self-pity and, to a lesser extent, shame. Freetown is captured perfectly as a city re-inventing itself on the ashes of its past. Its inhabitants know the past, but they do not discuss or want to remember it. The only thing worthy of contemplation is the future and the past will only harm that future. Danny is a remnant of Freetown's darkest moments and his investigation represents a very real threat to the leadership of Sierra Leone. An issue that will threaten both Danny and the few friends he has in Freetown. THE SECRET KEEPER is a terrific novel. It is very much comparable to the work of Graham Greene, both in its thematic

A Must-Read

Danny is a reporter living in London with a wonderful woman named Rachel. However, despite having a "good life", Danny is perpetually stuck four years in his past, back in civil warring Sierra Leone where he covered the biggest story of his life, fell in love, and saw danger for the first time. Leaving Sierra Leone has drained all the color from Danny's world. Without Sierra Leone--without Maria--Danny is only going through the motions of living. Then, years later, Danny receives a request for help from Maria. He's too late to help her, but he finds himself drawn into the Sierra Leone (now supposedly a "peaceful" place) once again. THE SECRET KEEPER had my attention immediately. Of course, it helps that the book begins with a disturbing torture scene. Beyond that, though, there are just so many things that struck me about the book within pages. Harris is a literary writer, but does so in a way that appeals to a wide range of people. His descriptions and commentary are just so damn apt. And he does it with beautiful prose. Absolutely stunning. Really, I'm nearly at a loss on where to begin with everything I love about THE SECRET KEEPER. Let's start with the setting. Harris, the author, obviously has had experience with the country and truly does the people justice. Instead of just appealing to the audience about the plight of the protagonist, Harris draws you into the turmoil of Sierra Leone. Though some of the imagery he brings up is nearly nauseating, I rejoiced at such a blunt, detailed, and emotional appeal for the country that, like the protagonist, fights itself and settles in an unsettling non-peace. Did I mention his prose is just beautiful to read? I'm pretty sure I could flip to any page and find a good example of what I mean. Here happens to be an example from the beginning of chapter 12: "London greeted him as it always seemed to when he was returning from abroad: with a cold, gray embrace. The train from Heathrow was half empty as it sliced through the suburbs and Danny saw the same grimy projects and people trudging through the rain." The characters, too, are memorable. I really felt for Danny--even if I didn't always agree with him. The man has so many doomed relationships, that he doesn't even realize he's losing control of the situation. He doesn't realize he loses his father or Rachel--or even Maria--until it's too late. His life slips away with him, because his heart cannot live without what he found in a foreign land. I recommend THE SECRET KEEPER whole-heartedly. The book has it all: political intrigue, international affairs, a protagonist who has faults (but still manages to gain sympathy), action, and a love affair. Plus? It has the wonderful bonus of being written in a layered, beautiful way.
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