Amazon.com Review
Amazon Best Books of the Month, September 2012: Initially, Eichenwald (
The Informant) planned to write a post-9/11 analysis of the second Bush presidency, until he realized that most of the events that set the stage for wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the War on Terror--the "decisions, deceptions, and delusions"--happened in the first 18 months after the attacks. This fast-paced narrative of those 553 days takes readers inside CIA headquarters, 10 Downing Street, al-Qaeda training camps, Egyptian torture chambers, and secret prisons. Deeply researched but written like an international spy thriller, Eichenwald's book shows how decisions prompted by fear, hatred, and paranoia created a post-9/11 history "shaped by the experiences of the powerless." --
Neal Thompson
Review
“An epic narrative....It may be his best book yet.” (
Vanity Fair)
“With the pacing of a suspense novel, award-winning journalist Eichenwald’s richly researched account … [is] a breathtaking inspection of the war on terror that began on 9/11 and reverberates to this day.” (
Booklist (starred review))
“Gripping . . . both a page-turning read and an insightful dissection of 9/11’s dark legacy" (
Publishers Weekly (starred review))
“A blow-by-blow, episodic reconstruction of the fallout from 9/11 in the highest spheres of terrorist strategy … demonstrating literally how the anti-terrorist hysteria in the United States, and the hatred of America and general global paranoia, forged the ’trauma that haunts the world to this day.’” (
Kirkus Reviews)
“Eichenwald is a master at making complicated stories easily understood....[
500 Days is] a page-turner because of his journalistic attention to detail. Readers get fly-on-the-wall accounts as Bush administration officials weigh life-and-death decisions.” (
Washington Post)
“Thorough reporting and crisp writing . . . Moves at the pace of a movie-ready thriller.” (
Dallas Morning News)
“Illuminating and entertaining throughout.” (
PARADE magazine)
“An ambitious undertaking and a valuable resource. . . . [Eichenwald] brings home the fundamental rashness and recklessness of the American response to the Sept. 11 attack.” (
New York Times Book Review)
“Who really made the decision to go to war in Iraq, and how grounded in fact were the "facts" fed to the American public? The author gives us not a seat at the table but an awfully good listening post to the decisions that changed the world.” (
Asbury Park Press and Home News Tribune (NJ))