The Siege
The Siege book cover

The Siege

Hardcover – August 4, 2009

Price
$14.61
Format
Hardcover
Pages
416
Publisher
Dutton Adult
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0525951223
Dimensions
6.36 x 1.41 x 9.34 inches
Weight
1.4 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly Starred Review. The Yale campus becomes the site of an increasingly tense siege in this stunning novel from bestseller White ( Dead Time ). After unidentified attackers quietly take over a building belonging to one of Yale's secret societies, they transform it into a virtual fortress holding an unknown number of students hostage. As officials become aware of what has happened, the response escalates in predictable fashion, but these hostage takers are completely unpredictable. They make no demands, agree to no negotiations and execute or release hostages as they choose. Suspended Boulder, Colo., policeman Sam Purdy eventually teams with maverick FBI agent Christopher Poe and CIA terror expert Deirdre Drake in an effort outside official channels to figure out what's going on. Brilliantly conceived and executed, this intellectually challenging and provocative thriller brings home the lesson that 9/11 might have been a mere prelude to more sophisticated assaults. (Aug.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. Stephen White is a clinical psychologist and the New York Times bestselling author of sixteen previous suspense novels, including Dead Time and Dry Ice . Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. April 19, Saturday Midday New Haven The building on the edge of campus could be mistaken for a mausoleum erected beyond the boundary of the cemetery across the street. It’s not. Some assume it is a mock courtroom for the nearby law school. It’s not that either. Although the structure’s Ionic columns suggest the imperial, like a treasury, or evoke the divine, like a temple, the word “tomb” is the tag attached by the community. The building puts out no mat and welcomes no stranger—the classic style was chosen not to invite attention, but rather to feel as familiar to passersby as the profile of the elm tree that shades the marble steps leading up from the street. The scale is deceptive. The neighboring edifices are large and imposing, with Gothic flourishes or neoclassical grandeur. In comparison, the tomb feels more stout and diminutive than it actually is. The building’s unadorned back is the only face that it reveals to the college. The sides are rectangular planes of marble blocks staggered in a brick pattern from ground to roof. There are no windows. In front, paired entry doors are recessed below a shallow gable at the top of eight stairs. That portal, trimmed in stone, framed by columns, overlooks the ancient plots of a graveyard that counts among its ghosts the remains of Eli Whitney and Noah Webster. An iron fence, the posts smithed in the form of slithering serpents, separates the building from the public sidewalks on the adjacent streets. The architecture is symbolic. The few decorative elements are symbolic. The site is symbolic. What happens inside the building is, at least occasionally, symbolic. This fine spring day, though, the crowds gathering behind the hastily established police lines aren’t gawking because of any symbolism. The curious are gathering because of the rumors of what is going down—that some students might be locked inside the mysterious building. The spectators don’t know it yet, but the reality is they are there because the building is a damn fort. A door opens and closes rapidly. When the young man emerges in front of the building his sudden appearance seems to have been part of an illusion. His eyes blink as they adjust to the light. Across the street he sees a crowd contained behind red-and-white saw horse barricades stenciled with the initials of the campus police. At the periphery, on both sides, are television cameras. Nearest to him, cops, lots of cops. Many have just raised their guns. The young man jerks his head, startled. “Don’t shoot! Don’t fucking shoot!” he says. He lifts his arms high before he takes two cautious steps forward. He stops a few feet in front of the row of columns. It is the spot a politician might choose to make a speech. His eyes close for a moment. When he opens them again, his irises—the same shade of green as the leaves budding out on the elm tree near the curb—are so brilliant they look backlit. The brilliance is generated by the terror churning in his cells. Two clusters of cops, one huddled group on each side of the building, begin to edge toward him in measured steps. The police are in full body armor and have raised weapons. Some carry shields. “No! Don’t come forward!” he yells, matching their adrenaline drop for drop. “Don’t! Don’t! Do not come near me! I am a bomb.” The cops slow at that caution. The young man is dressed in worn jeans and an untucked striped dress shirt over a T-shirt. He is barefoot. His chin and cheeks are spotted with stubble. Other than the absence of shoes, his appearance is not unlike that of many of his peers on campus. He lowers his arms before he lifts the front of his shirt. “See that! It’s a bomb. I’m a bomb. I . . . am . . . a bomb. Stay where you are.” On his abdomen, below his navel, is a rectangular object the size of a thick paperback book. It is held in place with tape that wraps around his hips. On the tape are handwritten block letters that read, “BOMB.” A few wires are visible at the top of the bulge. The device appears about as threatening as a burlesque prop. An officer barks an order. The approaching cops stop in their tracks. A few take a step or two back. The young man releases his shirt, covering the apparatus at his waist. All eyes are on him. He waits until there is complete silence. He opens his mouth to speak, but his throat is so dry he coughs. Finally, he manages to say, “I— He wants the . . . cell towers . . . turned back on.” The young man’s voice catches on the word “back.” He pauses, as though to think. “The news cameras stay in place. He says you have five minutes.” He lifts his wrist and looks at his watch. “Starting right now.” Near the police barricades two men in suits begin conferring with a woman wearing khaki pants and a simple top. She has a badge clipped to the front of her trousers. The younger of the two men is telling the woman that they know nothing about a cell tower shutdown. In an even voice, the woman says, “Then how about somebody finds out?” She takes one step forward. She has been preparing for this moment for hours. She is thinking, Finally, let the show begin. “Hi,” she says, addressing the hostage. “My name is Christine Carmody. I’m a negotiator with the New Haven Police. I know you’re scared.” She waits for his eyes to find her. To pick her khaki and pink out of the sea of blue. She is eager for this young man to make her his personal oasis. “I just requested that an order be given to get those towers working.” She is choosing her words carefully, beginning to communicate to the unseen subject that there is an active chain of command, that things will proceed in a certain way, that everything that happens going forward will take time. Mostly, she wants anyone inside the tomb to begin to understand that she is but a conduit, that she doesn’t control the world of blue uniforms and blue steel he sees around her. “Please . . . please tell . . . him? Is that right? . . . It’s a him? If he has a name, I’d love to know it, so I know what to call him . . . Five minutes? Please tell him that we can’t do it that quickly. Not quite that fast. It’s just not possible.” She has no intention of cooperating with this first demand on the hostage taker’s timetable. Certainly not yessir, right away, sir. One of the initial goals of her business—her business is hostage negotiation— is to make contact with the hostage taker and begin to establish rapport. Talking through this hostage, or any hostage, isn’t what she has in mind. Her response to the first demand reflects her underlying strategy. She will use this preliminary request to begin to set the piers for the bridge that will lead to direct discussions with the still-unseen hostage taker. Sergeant Christine Carmody’s African-American father died during the fall of Saigon in 1975. She grew up on Long Island with her Puerto Rican mother. Her life has not been easy; it’s been about always being tough enough to take it and about trying to be smart enough not to have to fight about it. She’s been talking her way out of tight spots since the day she stepped off her first school bus. Consonant with her desire to be invisibly obstreperous with the unseen hostage taker, at least at first, her voice is as close to level as she can make it. She makes sure that any lilt in her tone exudes respect and the promise of cooperation and conciliation. She is also trying to make certain that whoever is inside begins to understand that the current situation has real limitations. Carmody is cognizant of the purported bomb. For the moment, she is thinking about it the way she thinks about God. She is slightly more of a skeptic than a believer. She says, “Don’t get me wrong, I’m not aware of anything that will keep us from working something out about the phones. It must be some kind of technical problem. But we’re on that. Nothing makes me think that will turn out to be a big concern. He—you said, ‘He,’ right?—can . . . call me. We can talk directly. He and I. That’s probably the best way to get all this worked out. He and I can begin to solve this problem.” A uniformed officer hands her a scribbled sign. She holds it up so that it is facing the young man. “As soon as we solve the cell tower thing, this is the number that will get through directly to me. Me, personally.” She holds her mobile phone aloft so the young man can see it. “Like I said, it shouldn’t be an issue. His? . . . It’s a he? I have that right?” The young man does not react to her words. He does not reply to her questions. “Okay. Like I said, his request is . . . something to discuss. Absolutely. I’m ready to talk about it, explain what’s going on at my end, what we can do to solve this. How about a radio that will work until the cell phones are up again? We’ll give you one of ours—for him to use to talk to me in the meantime. We will work this out. Absolutely.” She emphasizes “will.” The young man doesn’t acknowledge her. He doesn’t move. She waits. The frittering away of seconds doesn’t concern her. Time is on her side. The young man closes his eyes. A good ten seconds pass before he opens them. “Okay, first things first,” she says. Her confidence has grown a tiny measure becaus... Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Stephen White—author of over a dozen
  • New York Times
  • bestsellers— returns with a relentlessly propelled, thriller that will remind readers of his acclaimed
  • Kill Me
  • . Stephen White’s Alan Gregory novels are beloved by both fans and critics—the most recent,
  • Dead Time
  • , was a USA Today and Book-Sense bestseller. In
  • The Siege
  • , Gregory’s longtime friend Sam Purdy takes center stage in a story that feels ripped from tomorrow’s headlines. From the first page on, readers need to be buckled in for a nonstop ride full of terror and pathos. As a lovely weekend approaches on the Yale campus it appears that a number of students—including the sons of both the Secretary of the Army and newest Supreme Court justice—may have gone missing. Kidnapping? Terrorism? The authorities aren’t sure. But the high-profile disappearances draw the attention of the CIA and the FBI’s vaunted Hostage Rescue Team. Attention quickly focuses on the fortress-like tomb of one of Yale’s secret societies. Suspended Boulder police detective Sam Purdy soon finds himself in New Haven, where he is quickly snared by an unlikely pair of Feds: FBI agent Christopher Poe and CIA analyst Deirdre Drake. Sam, Poe, and Dee join together, desperately trying to solve the riddle of what is going on inside the windowless stone tomb on the edge of campus. The clock is pounding in their ears. The unknown enemy is playing by no known rules . . . is making no demands . . . is refusing to communicate with the hostage negotiator . . . is somehow anticipating every FBI move . . . is completely unconcerned about getting away . . . And . . . is sending students, one by one, out of the building’s front door to die.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(98)
★★★★
25%
(82)
★★★
15%
(49)
★★
7%
(23)
23%
(76)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

"He's looking for ways to bring us down. Cripple us. Bleed us to death. Starve us of oxygen...Us. America. Us, U.S."

On a fine Saturday morning in April, the Yale campus is suddenly jolted by terror. More than two dozen students have gone missing in the past thirty-six hours, many of them the children of parents prominent in industry and government, and most of them recently "tapped" for one of Yale's secret societies. Some of these societies own elaborate Greek edifices on campus, the most prominent architectural feature of which is the complete lack of windows. Inside these "tombs," the societies' secrets remain absolute. All the attention this morning is on the tomb of Book and Snake, where, it appears, the missing students are being held hostage.

When Jonathan Simmons emerges from inside the tomb to face the assembled police, he yells, "I'm a bomb. I...am...a bomb. Stay where you are." Like an automaton, he answers no questions, and ticks off the minutes until his own expected death, as a New Haven Police hostage negotiator tries to gain time by engaging him in conversation. While this is happening in New Haven, suspended Boulder, Colorado, police detective Sam Purdy is meeting Ann Summers Calderon at her son's engagement party in Florida. At one point, Ann tentatively suggests a private meeting with Purdy and swears him to secrecy. She has received a bizarre note--from someone unknown, who demands nothing, but threatens her with unspecified consequences if she tells anyone she has received this message. Within twenty-four hours, she learns that her daughter, a junior at Yale, is one of the missing.

In a third plot line, Deirdre, a CIA agent at a Washington area conference, meets with FBI agent Christopher Poe, someone with whom she has been close since 1995. Poe works as a one-man department for the FBI, investigating low-probability, high-risk terror scenarios brought to the FBI's attention by (usually wacko) private citizens, and he has developed a "feel" for how these odd details sometimes contribute to bizarre, but plausible terror plots.

With this as background, author Stephen White uses his formidable background as a clinical psychologist to create one of the most nail-biting thrillers I have ever read. He has structured the novel so that the action rotates among the three subplots but is never resolved at the end of each scene, leaving something important up in the air, some question unanswered, an unexpected new drama unfolding. His psychologically vulnerable characters behave in plausible fashion, often sharing their emotional wounds with the reader and inspiring great empathy. The level of tension never wanes. White is a master craftsman creating a unique story with innumerable clever and unusual twists--and constant surprises. There is nothing formulaic about this book, and the resolution is a real tour de force, one that I never expected. Most importantly, it is this conclusion which moves the novel beyond the immediate and local, and elevates it into a grander commentary on our foreign policy and international reputation. A terrific thriller! n Mary Whipple
66 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I've got good news and better news

Stephen White is an excellent writer. (For what it's worth, I say this as a professor of English.) He never writes "a person . . . they" and always uses the subjunctive correctly. His descriptions are vivid, sometimes lyrical, but never over-wrought.

But White's a genius at character. In less than a half-page, we get a sense of Ann Summers Calderón that carries us through the entirety of the novel. We get the history, the aesthetics, and the dietary quirks of the hostage negotiator, even though she turns out to be a minor player. White switches his reader among three separate set of protagonists, but there's no confusion, no impulse to flip back to identify. Once he gives us a character, the person is real.

This isn't an Alan Gregory novel, but Sam Purdy steps onto center court with the aplomb of a Wimbledon champ. Sam could carry a series in his own right.

The sliding chronology is a little irritating and really unnecessary, but it untangles about halfway through. The primary tension derives from what's not there: any info about the bad guys. We are as in the dark as all of the law enforcement players and this works wonderfully well. We get enough background about Yale to make the place come to life, but White spares us the massive down-loads of data that some writers substitute for plot and character development.

The book comes as a surprise to long-time White fans, but it's a great surprise.
27 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

I've got good news and better news

Stephen White is an excellent writer. (For what it's worth, I say this as a professor of English.) He never writes "a person . . . they" and always uses the subjunctive correctly. His descriptions are vivid, sometimes lyrical, but never over-wrought.

But White's a genius at character. In less than a half-page, we get a sense of Ann Summers Calderón that carries us through the entirety of the novel. We get the history, the aesthetics, and the dietary quirks of the hostage negotiator, even though she turns out to be a minor player. White switches his reader among three separate set of protagonists, but there's no confusion, no impulse to flip back to identify. Once he gives us a character, the person is real.

This isn't an Alan Gregory novel, but Sam Purdy steps onto center court with the aplomb of a Wimbledon champ. Sam could carry a series in his own right.

The sliding chronology is a little irritating and really unnecessary, but it untangles about halfway through. The primary tension derives from what's not there: any info about the bad guys. We are as in the dark as all of the law enforcement players and this works wonderfully well. We get enough background about Yale to make the place come to life, but White spares us the massive down-loads of data that some writers substitute for plot and character development.

The book comes as a surprise to long-time White fans, but it's a great surprise.
27 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Slow

This book started out pretty good, but had a bizarre theme that seemed to lead to the proof of a flawed America, and to showcase the author's contempt for the previous administration. The first sentence should have read "I hate George Bush, and everything is his fault and will be forever." Then you could have skipped the actual book.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Don't think so

Sorry, folks. Cannot agree. In general I really like Stephen White's books but just could not get into this one. Has to be one of the slowest books I have ever attempted to read. NOT a page turner unless you are just skipping through to find the ending so you can get rid of it. I asked several folks also known to like White's books for their reactions to The Seige. One man told me he struggled with it to the bitter end. The others did as I had done. Tossed it without finishing it. The Purdy character is a good second bananna but this not only did not hold my interest, it never caught it. I was so looking forward to a new Stephen White book and am extremely dissappointed in this one. Hopefully, next time.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Parent's Worst Nightmare...

If you have children this novel will chill you to the bone. Dr. Alan Gregory is MIA from this tale but Sam Purdy comes to the forefront ably in his place. Since his significant other, Carmen, is on bed rest in the final weeks of her pregnancy Sam is deputized to take her place at the engagement party for Carmen's daughter Dulce. She is marrying into the wealthy Calderon family from Miami, Florida. Sam is feeling like a fish in unfamiliar waters and looking for any excuse to miss a scheduled golf game since the only kind of golf he plays is the miniature version. Unfortunately when Ann Calderon, mother of the groom, gives him that excuse the golf game starts looking much better.

Ann has received a cryptic letter from an unknown source that makes her uneasy. Worse, her daughter Jane hasn't called home with her usual frequency. Jane is a student at Yale and the last time Ann heard from her she was excited about being "tapped" for a secret society called Book & Snake. She should have been on a plane for home and not only has she failed to call her mother, she has also missed her flight. Ann feels something is very wrong and begs Sam to fly to New Haven to check things out. You already know our Sam is not going to refuse to help anyone in distress, much less a soon to be member of his family.

Once he arrives in New Haven things go south quickly. A death on campus, a sniper shooting at students from a tower is just the beginning of a weekend from hell. The Book & Snake "tomb," meeting place for the secret society of that name is the impregnable fortress that will be the setting for a hostage scenario that will give parents nightmares. What would you give up to assure that your child is not murdered on national television? The parents of these children are in charge of resources that could put the entire country at risk. The unknown subject creating this crisis is so clever that law enforcement has their hands tied. They are forced to watch one child after another die on the steps of their prison. Joining Sam is two new characters, Christopher Poe from the FBI and Diedre Drake from the CIA. Both characters are so lovingly drawn by White that you'll find yourself hoping to see them again in future novels. THE SIEGE is a thrill ride you won't want to put down once you start reading. And if you were disappointed that Alan is not the central character as usual you forget all about that as this tale draws you in and holds YOU hostage right up to the terrifying climax and satisfying end of this offering from talented writer, Stephen White.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not the best

I have read a number of books by Stephen White and found them suspenseful, thought provoking, and an all-round good read. The Seige was the exception to the rule. I found the plot tedious and not developed as well as I had hoped. There were so many characters mixed up in an alphabet soup of agencies that I had a hard time relating to any of the characters and a harder time remembering all of the agencies. The characters were not developed enough for me to be able to feel like I was "walking in their shoes." The premise was a good one, but the execution of it was plodding and almost tedious at times.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Blah!

I'm afraid I agree with the other one thru 3 star reviewers. I've read other work by him that was much better.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Not deserving of all the praise

Average book, at very best.
Kept waiting for the story to get more compelling.
I am stunned by all the 5 star ratings.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Left me someewhat unfulfilled

When I first started drinking diet soda, after years of regular, I noticed an aftertaste that I didn't care for but that I could live with. I don't notice it anymore since I've been drinking diet soda for so long. Well, this was the first novel by Stephen White that I have ever read, and it left me with an aftertaste.

When the action itself is happening, it's excellent. I can easily visualize the scenes in my head, and I was kept on edge as to what would happen next. However, it seems like the action in this novel is few and faw between. Most of it is either first-person ruminations of lead character Sam Purdy, love stories between Dee and Poe (who in the end turn out to be more insignificant in the outcome than I expected), and detailed descriptions of where law enforcement was and what they were doing to prepare for whatever came next. I found myself glazing over large passages just to get to the action, since I expected an action-filled tale. I won't give away the ending, but it was much less dramatic than I expected, and then the book continued on for longer than it should have.

So this book kind of left a bad taste in my mouth, even though parts of it were quite good. Worth a read when it hits the bargain rack, but not at full price.
3 people found this helpful