An Expensive Education
by Nick McDonell
ISBN: 0-8021-4481-0 / ISBN-13: 978-0-8021-4481-2
US $14.00 - 5 1/2 x 8 1/4, 304 pp - May 2010


Description:

Nick McDonell’s remarkable third novel, An Expensive Education, received rave reviews across the country, drawing comparisons to the works of Graham Greene and John le Carré and earning praise for its careful plotting and authentic depiction of life at Harvard. Taking off at the troubled intersection of academia and realpolitik and  shifting from the elite finals clubs of Harvard College and the manicured lawns  of Harvard Yard to Somalia’s dusty tracks and East Africa’s high-end hotels, it is a  story of corruption and love, betrayal and sudden death. 
     Mike Teak has a classic Harvard profile. But only on the surface. He’s a  twenty-five-year-old scholar/athlete from an upper-class family who was recruited  by his godfather to work for a U.S. intelligence agency. On a covert mission in a  Somali village, he delivers cash and cell phones to Hatashil, a legendary orphan  warrior turned rebel leader. It’s a routine assignment until, minutes after they  meet, the village is decimated by a missile assault, and although Mike escapes, his  life is changed forever. 
Echoing across continents, the assault disrupts professor Susan Lowell’s orderly  existence. Beautiful, happily married, and the mother of two, she has just won a  Pulitzer Prize for her book celebrating Hatashil. Also shaken is Lowell’s student,
     David Ayan, who was born in the targeted village a world away from Harvard’s  most exclusive final club, the Porcellian, which is courting him and Jane, the  smart, risk-taking daughter of East Coast money who’s sleeping with him.  David Ayan struggles with his identity and Susan Lowell struggles against  rumors about her relationship with Hatashil, who has been accused of ordering  the village massacre. But it is Mike Teak who faces a deadly struggle—because  when he discovers a horrific conspiracy he immediately realizes that he has  become expendable, with nowhere to run and no one to trust. Until the very last minute.