Award-winning
novelist and missions journalist Jeanette Windle has lived in six countries and
traveled in more than 30, authored 16 fiction titles, and mentors writers on
five continents. Jeanette's detailed
research and writing is so realistic it has prompted government agencies to
question if she received classified information.
When a multinational corporation with unlimited
funds hires on a private military company with unbridled power, how far might
they be willing to go with the planet's ultimate "conflict mineral"
up for grabs? Especially in a Congolese
rainforest where governmental accountability is only too cheaply for sale.
A veteran in handling corruption and conspiracy,
former Marine lieutenant Robin Duncan has never had any trouble discerning good guys from bad. But when her
security team is sent to track down an insurgent killer, Robin faces a man who
broke her trust years ago and discovers that gray areas extend deeper into the
jungle than she anticipated.
As a vicious global conspiracy emerges, run by
brutal men who don’t leave witnesses alive, Robin must decide if there is
anyone left she can trust. And where is God in the suffering and injustice? How
is it possible followers of Yesu (Jesus) caught in the crossfire can still
rejoice when everything they hold dear is ripped away?
Jeanette, where did you get your inspiration for Congo Dawn?
For the story's actual suspense thread, I've had
opportunity to witness what a multinational corporation is capable of in dark
corners of the Third World when no one is watching (a personal experience in
itself too unbelievable to write up as fiction). In Africa as elsewhere, both
the protective and striking arm of such corporations has historically been
hired foreign mercenaries (the British East India Company's conquest of India
is the ultimate example).
But
today's post-9/11 private military corporations are vastly different than their
predecessors, possessing more fire power than the average country. What struck
me was the lack of accountability to any outside oversight beyond whichever
paid-off regional warlord currently holds power. Just how far might a
multinational corporation with the striking force of a private army be willing
to go with the planet's ultimate "conflict mineral" up for grabs?
Coming up with one very plausible possibility birthed Congo Dawn.
On a deeper spiritual level,
Congo Dawn addresses the age-old question of how a world filled with such darkness, injustice
and pain can possibly be the creation of a God of love. How can followers of
Yesu [Jesus] in the bleakness of an
Ituri rainforest conflict zone or any other dark corner of this planet take
seriously a Scriptural mandate to rejoice in their suffering [James 1:2; I
Peter 4:13]? What value beyond our own comprehension might human suffering
possibly hold that a loving Creator God permits it to continue?
What
don't most people know about you?
The first one-day
writers conference I taught was exclusively to female millionaire aristocrats,
virtually all connected to the cocaine cartels. The organizer was actually the
"grand dame" of one of US counternarcotics
'most wanted' drug mafias (it was a shock to have her name turn up on the DEA
watch list when I was researching my next title in Miami!) Of course at the
time, I didn't know who they were other than members of Bolivia's ruling power
junta. As a journalist with a handful of published fiction titles, and more
significantly fluent in Spanish, I'd received the invite through a mutual
expatriate contact. What was their interest in such a conference other than the
sheer boredom of their Paris Hilton lifestyle? Some were ambitious to increase
their media influence through international journalism; others to write their
own memoirs. The event's five-star hotel accommodations and air-freighted
refreshments alone could have fed every street kid in the city for a week. That
experience and its organizer actually found their way (suitably revised) into
the pages of my first adult suspense title, CrossFire,
set in the international counternarcotics war in Bolivia.
Wow, fascinating stuff, Jeanette! Thanks for sharing with my readers.
For information about Congo Dawn or to order a copy, log onto
2 comments:
I think I entered a contest to win this book. It sounds very interesting.
Wonderful, Debbie. Yes, Jeanette is a seasoned writer with vast first-hand experience to back up her stories.
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