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Thomas Ausa, an obscure but adequately credentialed professor of American International Relations, at the end of his career imagined he might best illustrate what he called the ""themes"" or ""frames"" or ""buzzwords"" of American foreign policy by telling a few stories about typical Americans living through these pandemic times in ways he hoped would illustrate terms like ""deterrence,"" ""containment,"" ""asymmetrical warfare,"" and ""mutual assured destruction."" The novel fragment he left attempts to do that. Whether he succeeded only future readers, if any, will tell. The afterword by Liv…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Thomas Ausa, an obscure but adequately credentialed professor of American International Relations, at the end of his career imagined he might best illustrate what he called the ""themes"" or ""frames"" or ""buzzwords"" of American foreign policy by telling a few stories about typical Americans living through these pandemic times in ways he hoped would illustrate terms like ""deterrence,"" ""containment,"" ""asymmetrical warfare,"" and ""mutual assured destruction."" The novel fragment he left attempts to do that. Whether he succeeded only future readers, if any, will tell. The afterword by Liv Wells, former U.S. Deputy Chief of Mission at several American embassies, doesn't help much.
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Autorenporträt
Beyond the four volumes of The Japan Quartet (Under Hiroshima, 2013; The Game in the Past, 2017; Soldier for Christ, 2014; This Footstool Earth, 2018), John Zeugner has written a satiric chess thriller, Manila Gambit, 2016; a collection of three short novels, Food for Jackals, 2015; and a collection of short stories, Life-Arc Teaching Tales, 2015.