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Review: The Samaritan’s Secret

Shlumpy sleuth lifts the lid on Palestine

March 26, 2009 13:51
Matt Rees — more revelations of life on the Palestinian street

ByJenni Frazer, Jenni Frazer

1 min read

By Matt Rees
Atlantic Books, £11.99

There is something slightly unsavoury about reading Matt Rees’s latest Palestinian thriller in the wake of the Gaza conflict. It is the third outing for his rather unappealing hero, Omar Yussef, whose base as a history teacher in Bethlehem is not what you might think of as the ideal background for a dogged detective.

Yet Omar Yussef — balding, out of condition and, for all I know, with flat feet — is indeed dogged to the core. His dubious policeman friend, Khamis Zeydan, is even more disabled in this book than before, this time with not just a prosthetic hand but with raging diabetes and a horribly unappealing phlegmy cough. At one point, this intrepid pair are climbing a mountain and it is anyone’s guess whether either of them is going to survive. James Bond this ain’t.

The Samaritan’s Secret is not as bloody or with as high a body count as Rees’s previous two books, but, like them, it provides a really fascinating inside view of Palestinian society.