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Anyone know the name
Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 9:45 pm
by marksiwel
Anyone know the name of a book thats about Americans converting to Islam in mass?
Re: Anyone know the name
Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 9:51 pm
by Oldgringo
marksiwel wrote:Anyone know the name of a book thats about Americans converting to Islam in mass?
Do you mean a bunch at a time (
en masse) or in the state of?
Seriously, you might try a search on Ammazon.com.
Re: Anyone know the name
Posted: Tue Dec 01, 2009 11:47 pm
by chabouk
Oldgringo wrote:marksiwel wrote:Anyone know the name of a book thats about Americans converting to Islam in mass?
Do you mean a bunch at a time (
en masse) or in the state of?
...or during Holy Communion?
Wow, that would have to be a really bad sermon to cause
en masse conversions.
Re: Anyone know the name
Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 10:16 am
by marksiwel
No, I mean like the country becomes a Muslim country. It was released like 2-3 years ago.
I've checked amazon, cant find it
Re: Anyone know the name
Posted: Wed Dec 02, 2009 10:26 am
by marksiwel
Aha! Found it!
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Taking post-9/11 conspiracy theories that blamed the attacks on Zionist agents as the seed for this unusual thriller, Ferrigno (The Wake-Up) posits a nuclear terrorist onslaught in 2015 on New York City, Washington, D.C., and Mecca that has all the earmarks of a Mossad operation. The blue states are moved by these horrors to convert to Islam, while the red states break away from the Islamic Republic, forming a Christian republic in the South. By 2040, three major parties struggle for control in the Islamic Republic: the moderate State Security forces, under Redbeard; the Black Robes, a fundamentalist religious police force; and the top-secret Assassins, under the Old One. When Sarah Dougan, Redbeard's niece and a respected historian, reinvestigates the 2015 attack for a new book, The Zionist Betrayal?, the Old One sics his deadliest assassin on her. Running from Seattle to Vegas, Sarah has a protector in her lover, an ex-fedayeen soldier named Rakkim Epps, whose agnostic POV anchors the novel. Fans of instapundit politics will love this thriller, which has the cinematic motion and atrocity F/X of a good airport read. However, Ferrigno's gimmick—the transformation of America into a cartoon version of Islam—lends the proceedings a damaging air of implausibility. (Feb.)
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