Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot book cover

Whiskey Tango Foxtrot

Paperback – May 26, 2015

Price
$18.26
Format
Paperback
Pages
448
Publisher
Mulholland Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0316252652
Dimensions
5.4 x 1.3 x 8.2 inches
Weight
14.4 ounces

Description

"Is it too late to nominate a candidate for novel of the summer? . . . A paranoid, sarcastic and clattering pop thriller . . . Mr. Shafer gets the playfulness-to-paranoia ratio about exactly right. . . . He's got a sick wit and a high style. Reading his prose is like popping a variant of the red pill in The Matrix: Everything gets a little crisper. . . . Whiskey Tango Foxtrot is a page-turner, yet many more "literary" writers will, I suspect, envy Mr. Shafer's tactile prose. His eye is hawklike. . . . Mr. Shafer has written a bright, brash entertainment, one that errs, when it errs at all, on the side of generosity, narrative and otherwise. It tips you, geekily and humanely, through the looking glass."― Dwight Garner , New York Times "Genius techno-xadthriller à la Neal xadStephenson, powered by social-media info-conspiracy à la Dave Eggers."― Lev Grossman , Time "Zinging with wit and pop culture savvy . . . Shafer's writing is hip, wickedly hilarious, cutting edge, and ultimately concerned with old-fashioned notions of morality and redemption. . . His inventive, comic, dystopian semi-thriller restored my faith in fiction."― Mark Lindquist , Seattle Times "Smart, funny . . . A techno-thriller with a soul . . . Shafer etches diamond-sharp and precisely observed contemporary satire."― Laura Miller , Salon "A unique literary treat . . . As ambitious a fiction debut as you're ever likely to encounter . . . At turns the novel feels like a breakneck spy thriller, until, just around the next corner it morphs into a darkly comedic look at the realities of the human condition in our increasingly technology-fueled world."― Brooke Wylie , Examiner.com "Shafer's savvy, sardonic take on our social media- and Big Data-worshiping society is as current as your Twitter feed..Just in time for your August beach trip, put Whiskey on your Amazon Wish List. As if they don't already know you want it."― Patty Rhule , USA Today "Shafer hits all the right buttons in his debut as he mixes crime fiction, espionage, and SF in a darkly comic novel."― Publishers Weekly (starred) "An edgy, darkly comedic novel whose characters and premise are as up-to-the-minute as an online news feed but as classic as the counterculture rebellions once evoked by Edward Abbey and Ken Kesey...Shafer's arch prose, comedic timing and deft feel for shadowy motives in high places are reminiscent of the late Richard Condon ( The Manchurian Candidate ), only with sweeter, sweeper characterizations...It's possible that Shafer is remaking the international thriller into something more humane and thus more credible."― Kirkus Reviews "Hilarious, moving, and wildly ambitious, David Shafer's Whiskey Tango Foxtrot reads like a plot against America dreamed up by the NSA and then ghostwritten by Don DeLillo-a love story-cum-international thriller about our surveillance society that's so convincingly paranoid you'll tape over your webcam. Forget debut: it marks the arrival of a major new writer."― Adam Ross , author of Mr. Peanut "Roaming from Burma to Oregon to a mysterious ship in the open ocean, David Shafer's debut novel is a stylish, absorbing, sharply modern hybrid of techno thriller and psychodrama that bristles with wit and intellect and offers a dark, incisive vision of the global consequences of turning our lives into collectable data. This book will stay with you long after you've finished it. " ― Maggie Shipstead , author of Astonish Me "Outlandishly clever. Evoking the technological-paranoia of Philip K. Dick and the verbal pyrotechnics of David Foster Wallace, Shafer's digital take-over is absurdly comical and all too familiar. The characters are complicated, fascinating, and fully engaging while the threats feel frighteningly real."― Joe Meno , author of The Great Perhaps "David Shafer's amazing debut novel should be a controlled substance, its addictive quotient of the highest order. I devoured it imagining this is what a brainstorming event between Thomas Pynchon and Edward Snowden would deliver."― Bob Shacochis , author of The Woman Who Lost Her Soul "Hilarious and chilling, fast-paced and thoughtful, Whiskey Tango Foxtrot is literary entertainment of the highest order. While the novel reads like a comic thriller, it speaks powerfully to our over-connected, over-watched, privacy-depleted moment. I admire the hell out of it."― Ken Kalfus , National Book Award nominated author of Equilateral "A Graham Greene novel written by Edward Snowden. The Anonymous novel I have been waiting for -- a stiletto thriller of the too-real panopticon digitizing our every breath nowadays."― Tom Paine , author of Scar Vegas David Shafer is a graduate of Harvard and the Columbia Journalism School. He has lived in Argentina and Dublin, and has been a journalist, sometimes a carpenter, once a taxi driver and briefly a flack for an NGO. He now lives in Portland with his wife, daughter, and son.

Features & Highlights

  • Three young adults grapple with the usual thirty-something problems -- boredom, authenticity, an omnipotent online oligarchy -- in David Shafer's darkly comic debut novel.
  • The Committee, an international cabal of industrialists and media barons, is on the verge of privatizing all information. Dear Diary, an idealistic online Underground, stands in the way of that takeover, using radical politics, classic spycraft, and technology that makes Big Data look like dial-up. Into this secret battle stumbles an unlikely trio: Leila Majnoun, a disillusioned non-profit worker; Leo Crane, an unhinged trustafarian; and Mark Deveraux, a phony self-betterment guru who works for the Committee. Leo and Mark were best friends in college, but early adulthood has set them on diverging paths. Growing increasingly disdainful of Mark's platitudes, Leo publishes a withering takedown of his ideas online. But the Committee is reading -- and erasing -- Leo's words. On the other side of the world, Leila's discoveries about the Committee's far-reaching ambitions threaten to ruin those who are closest to her. In the spirit of William Gibson and Chuck Palahniuk,
  • Whiskey Tango Foxtrot
  • is both a suspenseful global thriller and an emotionally truthful novel about the struggle to change the world in- and outside your head.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(323)
★★★★
20%
(215)
★★★
15%
(162)
★★
7%
(75)
28%
(302)

Most Helpful Reviews

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I used to love ordering the entire Man Booker long list every year

I've had trouble recently finishing books. I used to love ordering the entire Man Booker long list every year. But lately I've been getting bored. This book was a welcome surprise during a recent vacation that reignited my love for good stories. It's not perfect, but it's a great story with many hilarious moments. I highly recommend it - especially for the beach.
1 people found this helpful
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The book delivers what the title promises

If there was such a genre as "slacker cyberpunk," Whiskey Tango Foxtrot would firmly fit inside it. You might also find it on the "rehab science fiction" or "literary conspiracy drama" shelves at B&N. Repeated mentions of Edward Snowden on the back cover might lead a harried stockperson to shelve it in the "post-privacy politics" section. This is both the charm and the downfall of this novel; it's neither fish nor fowl, neither literary nor genre, neither serious nor sendup.

For all this, it's not hard to sum up the concept: three youngish Americans of various levels of slackerhood run afoul of a Secret Global Conspiracy(TM) to privatize all of the world's data and crash the public Internet so the SGC can sell to the cat video-starved masses the services of a private Internet. (Yes, this is supposed to still be fiction.) Our heroes connect with the digital underground and try to derail the SGC's plans. Hilarity ensues.

The author's voice is spry and witty, and he knows his way around a paragraph. His dialog is just so for the various characters -- although all Our Heroes are perhaps a bit too literate and arch -- and his settings are lightly sketched but with enough shading to allow us to build a good-enough mental picture. (Some familiarity with Portland, Oregon is helpful.) The tone is light enough that you'll figure the author wasn't taking this all that seriously, and perhaps neither should you. This isn't a bad thing; some more ludicrous thrillers I've read took themselves very seriously, which made them unintentionally more funny. Here the laugh lines are deliberate.

Despite the sprinkling of terms like "techno-thriller" and "comic thriller" on the dust jacket, this isn't really a thriller, even though it has some of those trappings (the occasional car chase, secret agents, the global cabals and counter-cabals, assassins, and so on). Nothing especially exciting happens, there are no action set-pieces, and even the ticking clock is more a vague presence than an actual thing. The author's more interested in the main characters' backgrounds and day-to-day dramas than in setting up or running a traditional thriller. Whether this approach works for you depends on how well you can engage with the main characters.

Of these, NGO operative Leila is the most together, energetic and directed of the three -- at the expense of having an actual life, of course, which I understand isn't unusual for global-aid workers. Mark is a drug-addled fake self-help guru and Leo is a drug-addled trust-fund Portlandian with a highly checkered employment history. Both male leads are regularly overmatched by real life and are mostly defined by the controlled and uncontrolled substances they overindulge in. Leila got me through this; I couldn't bring myself to care about either of the men, who worked very hard to squander what good fortune they had. Having dealt with real addictive personalities, I'm less than enchanted by the ultimately egotistical hijinks of fictional ones, especially when I'm supposed to root for them as protagonists.

About the ending: yes, it's abrupt, and yes, it robs us of any closure. Maybe that's the literary part of this novel poking its head above the surface; maybe the author couldn't make up his mind whether he wanted to offer us hope or despair and left us with limbo instead. YMMV.

No matter what you expect, Whiskey Tango Foxtrot may leave you partly entertained and somewhat puzzled. The title is military phonetic alphabet for "WTF" -- and we all know what that means. For once, the book delivers what the title promises.
1 people found this helpful
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Great summer read

I’m usually late to the party for novels, but I like finding great stories by under-the-radar authors, and that’s just what this is. I like the characters a lot and enjoyed the wait to see how they were linked. As in all stories in this genre, you have to suspend some disbelief. Some of the negative reviewers seem naive about that. As for the complaints about the ending, the author asks us to use our imaginations and extrapolate. It’s pretty clear what the trajectory was. I don’t think it needs a sequel, but if there is one, I’ll surely buy it. Terrific first novel by a promising writer.
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Leaves you hanging….UGH!!!!

Well written and a good story… BUT totally leaves you with an unfinished ending. Nothing like abandoning your audience. Did you run out of ideas? Glad I didn’t pay for this book.
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Too many words and no conclusion

WTF started with a great premise - I like me some conspiracy theories - about an aid worker who sees something she shouldn't in the Burmese jungle. Schafer does a good job fleshing out the three protagonists and gives them some motivation, but then seems to run out of steam about halfway through the book. There are loads of red herrings throughout - plot points that seem to be important, but which only exist for those 3 or 5 or 10 pages and then have no relevancy through the rest of the book. For example, as Leila, the lead female character, escapes Myanmar and is waiting in the airport, one of the male characters spots her at the airport bar and engages her in a card game of hearts. When was the last time you saw a person casually playing hearts with a stranger at an airport bar, not to mention someone who just escaped the secret police in an authoritarian state. Schafer spends several pages describing her strategy of play from the man's perspective, but except for one brief mention about 200 pages later, this card game is irrelevant to the plot.

Schafer seems to have this penchant for showing off fancy vocabulary. A drawbridge becomes a "bascule bridge" and Leila's sister suffers from "phocomelia" - another 20 pages of irrelevant information about how she overcomes her handicap. Why is this relevant? Another red herring that adds volume but does nothing to progress the plot.

Finally, there are several deus ex machina elements in the story. Schafer can't seem to be able to get from a naïve aid worker to uncoverer of international conspiracy, so he invents a magical device that makes characters almost omniscient in about 20 seconds. Ta da!! Time, space, and learning potential are suddenly gone.

Others have described the ending, or lack thereof, so I won't explain my disappointment in that. Overall, a weak effort and I would recommend skipping this book.
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I really loved this book

I really loved this book. The author's writing style was very entertaining. I loved his character development. I was totally immersed and lost in the story. The ending was not neatly wrapped up in a bow and for me this was OK. A nice change and lots left to the imagination. Thank you Mr. Shafer for such an entertaining book.
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Don't believe this is in the same class as the names dropped in reviews...no where close

WHAT I LIKED The first half of the book had a lot of word combinations that shorthanded modern quandaries. Made me laugh.

WHAT IS IT REALLY ABOUT?
The three main characters are just representational caricatures of the modern angsters.

The Portland trustaholic. Not rich. But enough money to escape the need to grow up. Sensitive loser type.

The Motivational Speaker Who stumbles into success...with a vacuous message bought into by many. Including Oprah clone/clown.

The Single Persian woman compelled towards success and doing good. But is it enough? Whisp of the cardinal sin..why aren't I happy?

Very self referential. Even good summary of the conflicts these types face. BS? Or enlightening?

Story wrapped around a cabal that is going to steal all the data in the world. Big bad guys. Not very convincing to me. But maybe this is a warning book..
One if by land. Two if by sea! The Data Controllers are coming!

At first enjoyable. Then turned dusky for me. I finished it. Mindlessley
Threw it away when done.
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Blah!

Read thru the first part as the author was setting up characters/plot. Got excited to see where this might head during the middle. And just about pulled my fingernails out during the last part where too much coincidence, too many words made the plot get overly complicated and poorly developed. High hopes for the story and it went off the rails. The WTF ending is pure setup for a sequel which I won't be buying or reading.
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The ending was horrible (it didn't end…) but

The ending was horrible (it didn't end…) but, otherwise, it was an excellent book with great writing that held my attention the entire time and which I was sad to finish.
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Three Stars

It was OK, but not a page-turner