SHELL GAME, By Steve Alten
A Review By Carolyn Baker
ccun.org, January 26, 2008
Change is avalanching upon our heads, and
most people are grotesquely unprepared to cope with it.
~Alvin Toffler~
With a doctorate in Sports Administration from
Temple University, unhappy in his job, and struggling to support a
family, Steve Alten wanted to write, but his rigorous schedule left
no discretionary time for doing so. Nevertheless, he began writing
every night from 10PM to 3 AM and on weekends, delivering in eight
months a novel which
would evolve into a novel/movie series about a pre-historic great
white shark. After a long chain of science fiction thrillers, Alten
has taken a decidedly political turn, and tomorrow, January 22,
2008, will release his new futuristic page-turner,
The Shell Game (Sweetwater
Books), subtitled: The End of Oil, The Next 9/11, and The End
Of Civilization.
When Steve sent me a review copy of Shell Game,
despite glowing reviews of it from people I know and respect, I
sighed and squirmed in my chair. Anyone who knows me well knows that
I don't DO fiction-or to be more specific, I resist it because of
the difficulty I usually experience with trying to organize the
characters of a novel in my mind. Nevertheless, I emailed Steve and
assured him that I would review the book and began skimming it with
dread. Peeking into the pages with immense caution and aloofness,
something completely astounding happened: I found myself
inexplicably riveted. That someone like me could not put the book
down speaks volumes, and no one was more surprised than I was.
As reviewer
Bill Douglas
points out, Shell Game opens from the perspective of the
neocons "THEN,
the novel proceeds to dis-assemble that ‘reality' taking the reader
on a journey that shows the ugly underbelly of false flag terrorism,
diminishing civil and human rights, and the lies that led into past
wars, and portend to lead us all into future wars."
Early on in the
book, we hear protagonist Ace Futrell, a petroleum geologist and
former college football star, testifying before Congress regarding
the precariousness of world oil supplies, his grim report engulfed
and lost in a morass of political posturing by both parties. Futrell
is married to Kelli Doyle, who had worked undercover for the CIA and
the neocons, but is now gravely ill with terminal cancer. In her
final days, Doyle is penning an expose entitled "To The Brink Of
Hell: An Apology To The Survivors" in which she is disclosing the
machinations of empire which are driving humanity to the collapse of
civilization. The first sentence reads: "Frankly, I hope this scares
the hell out of you." In another portion of Doyle's tell-all memoir
she unleashes a litany of the lies of empire, noting that "All
presidents lie." Roosevelt, she says, lied about Pearl Harbor,
Lyndon Johnson about Vietnam, Reagan about Iran-Contra, and Clinton
about personal affairs in the Oval Office. Yet she emphasizes that:
"...it was the lies
coming from the Bush-Cheney White House after the events of
September 11, 2001 that led us to the invasion if Iraq and to a
crossroads in western civilization that will affect you and your
loved ones and a billion more innocent people.
Did the U.S.
intelligence community know al Qaeda's attack was coming?
Yes.
But did we try to
stop them?
Yes, but we were
prevented from doing so."(77)
Doyle's subsequent
revelations then echo the exhaustive research of Mike Ruppert in
Crossing The Rubicon and the work of countless other 9/11 truth
researchers, which explains the posting of the Bill Douglas review
on 9/11 Blogger.
In fact, Alten's mesmerizing novel is already being embraced by many
in the 9/11 Truth movement and is likely to take root in its fertile
soil-possibly giving birth to a movie version of Shell Game
which would be nothing less than a two-hour nail-biter.
Like any good story,
Shell Game is not linear but rather unfolds in a spiral of
intrigue that culminates in a second 9/11-this time a nuclear one
occurring in Los Angeles. But first and second 9/11's are not the
principal focus of Alten's captivating novel. He has painstakingly
clarified the corruption, greed, and power-driven madness that makes
such catastrophes possible in the twenty-first century and
intertwines these with the reality of a planet in the throes of
unprecedented resource depletion. One is tempted to ask, "With all
we actually know, how could this happen?" until Ace Futrell in
Shell Game is rudely awakened by a conversation with Kelli's
cousin, Jennifer.
This fictional
dialog could not be more timely than in the non-fiction election
year of 2008, and Jennifer, a former campaign strategist trained
under Karl Rove, enlightens Ace regarding the duplicity of the
mainstream political process. Insisting that Jennifer explain why in
the face of all of the evidence regarding climate change and energy
depletion, Congress essentially takes no meaningful action, he asks:
So, despite all the
evidence of climate changes, despite rising gas prices, despite air
pollution and respiratory problems...despite the fact that the world
is running out of oil and we're ill prepared for what will happen
next-nothing will change?
Jennifer replies:
Not in Washington.
Ace, it's not about the problem, it's all about the message. Most
candidates' policies run counter to their own voters' interests.
They get elected on sound bites and staying on message. Repeat the
biggest lie often enough, and the public will accept it as truth.
Give me enough money to blitz the media, and I could get Elmer Fudd
elected, assuming he occasionally went to church and could lose the
lisp....You begin with the message, something you can sell. Doesn't
matter if it's true. Then you spend a million dollars in ads
hammering it into the American psyche.
(133-134)
In my opinion,
Shell Game was worth the read for this particular dialog alone
between Ace and Jennifer of which I have quoted only a small
portion. Without having access to a former campaign strategist's
explanation as Ace has in the story, I grasped the same realities
several years ago which is one of a plethora of reasons that I
personally have no intention of ever again voting in a federal
election in America-at least until the present political system has
thoroughly collapsed.
Shell Game's
value lies not only in underscoring the catastrophes toward which
the human race is hurtling but in analyzing the mindset of empire
that has made them inevitable. Alten's novel feels eerily prescient
and replete with tragic scenarios that now seem probable-perhaps
unstoppable.
The book ends with the closing comments of Kelli
Doyle's memoir, simply: "Will we ever learn?"
I sit with that
question, and as I do, another question comes: "How do we
learn? What will it take for us to learn?"
Other civilizations
have created and maintained natural cultures and lived harmoniously
with each other and the ecosystems for millennia, so we know that
such functioning among humans is possible. It is absolutely
possible that humans can once again create and maintain similar
cultures for significant periods of time, but can we do this without
having to experience the collapse of the current civilization? I
think not, yet as one who sincerely believes in miracles, I dare not
preclude the possibility. However, I'm no longer willing to say that
"time is running out" because time has already run out. I
must now answer Kelli Doyle's question with another question: What
will it take to wake us up? What will it take for us to learn?
Shell Game demonstrates some horrifying possible answers to
those questions. It will not offer solutions, but it will take you
on a spellbinding adventure that even a fiction-phobe like me could
not resist.
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