The Tourist (novel)

The Tourist is an espionage novel written by Olen Steinhauer in 2009, that was featured on The New York Times' list of best sellers.[1] The story follows Milo Weaver, an agent with a secret branch of the CIA specializing in black ops known as the Tourists.[2] George Clooney's production company allegedly purchased the film rights to the novel in March 2009. It is rumored that Clooney intends to play the role of Weaver.[2]

The Tourist
First edition
AuthorOlen Steinhauer
LanguageEnglish
GenreEspionage
PublisherMinotaur Books
Publication date
2009
Media typeHardcover and paperback
Pages408
ISBN0-312-37487-9
Followed byThe Nearest Exit 

Reviews

As enjoyable as the books are, however, once we start looking at them closely, their flaws become all too apparent. The stories are improbably and needlessly elaborate, with the main plots surrounded by a web of subplots that come and go. Sometimes these are resolved and sometimes not, and they bring with them a large supporting cast of minor characters who also drop in and out of the story. Much of this is just complication for its own sake, and many of the characters are little more than stock figures...Casting the United States as a malign influence with a cowboy mentality is cliché, not insight, and Steinhauer makes the point with such certainty and simplicity that it sounds like something written by an undergraduate who has just learned that the world is a complex, unhappy place rather than the rational arena he had expected.

John Ehrman: The Tourist Trilogy: The New Genre? - Studies in Intelligence Vol. 56 No. 4
gollark: ...
gollark: Someone on Switchcraft tried to "DDOS Google" using about 200 CC computers.
gollark: Yes, do not be evil but also it probably wouldn't work.
gollark: Ender pouches *are* infinite range, but have bad UX.
gollark: You can always use the OC ARM architecture if you want and are on 1.7.10.

References

  1. "Best Sellers". The New York Times. March 27, 2009. Retrieved June 20, 2010.
  2. Stasio, Marilyn (March 12, 2009). "Once a Spy . . ". The New York Times. Retrieved June 20, 2010.


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