The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

Buy the Book

Hal Colebatch’s Counterstrike Is a Thriller of Ideas

In the Information Age, a lie may be the most powerful weapon of all.

Counterstrike, by Hal Colebatch
(Acashic Publishing, 245 pages, $23.99 paper; $19.99 e-book)

In the Information Age, a lie may be the most powerful weapon of all.

The American Spectator’s own Hal G. P. Colebatch, Australian lawyer and poet, as well as author of nonfiction books and co-author of works of science fiction, has branched out into a new subgenre of speculative fiction — a near future story focusing on the war of ideas, in his freshly released novel, Counterstrike.

The time is about five years from now. The war of militant Islam against the West continues. There has been murderous rioting in England, and Sharia Law is taking hold there. But far away in Australia, it all still seems unreal. Harry Godwin, our hero, is a lawyer and a part-time university instructor in an unnamed (but not unguessable) western Australian city. Still smarting from the break-up of a romantic relationship, he diverts himself with sophisticated war gaming along with other members of a local club, moving model ships and sailors across an elaborate board. He’s a romantic at heart, somewhat regretful that he’ll never have the chance to participate in a real naval battle.

He joins his friend Toby in what they call an “immram” (an Irish word for a sea pilgrimage, inspired, they say, by The Voyage of the Dawn Treader) to explore offshore ocean islands and do some diving from Toby’s small sailboat. En route they encounter a pair of Toby’s friends, a married couple who sail a large yacht, along with their attractive friend Leonie. They decide to all throw in together for the immram. In the course of it, Harry and Leonie are drawn to one another, though he’s gun-shy and awkward with her.

As they voyage they encounter a university research vessel carrying, among other personnel, a visiting lecturer from the United States, a Professor Sojourner, who has recently made headlines with his theory that the British government knew in advance of the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor, but withheld the intelligence from the U.S., hoping to draw the Yanks into the World War II. A famous lost warship, he believes, carries proof of this betrayal.

In the course of their diving, Harry and his party discover what seems to be the wreckage of a warship of that period. Which sets them on a collision course with Professor Sojourner and the university faculty, in a battle of truth and lies that threatens the very existence of the U.S.-Australian alliance, just when both countries need each other more than they have for decades.

Counterstrike isn’t an action novel. No shots are fired onstage, no punches thrown (though there is an explosion). This Armageddon is ushered in through ideas, through words, through the mendacity of people who hate liberty, who feel a “moral” compulsion to destroy the cultural roots that nurture them in service of an ideology more powerful (to them) than loyalty or love. Some things are won, and many things are lost, but hope abides.

Colebatch is a sensitive and descriptive writer, investing his story with all his affection for his city, his country, the sea, great literature, and history. Through Harry Godwin’s eyes, we observe a sun-bright world made fragile under the threat of a thing so apparently trivial and laughable as a conspiracy theory. At one point, Harry says:

There’s a strange syndrome present. Different conspiracy theorists will very often associate with, and reinforce, one another even when they have mutually incompatible beliefs. On the 9/11 conspiracy sites one theorist who claims that a missile was fired into the Pentagon will associate himself with another theorist who claims a remotely controlled plane was crashed into the Pentagon. And how many Islamicists will proclaim simultaneously that 9/11 and the rest were great blows struck for Islam against the West and that they are part of a Jewish plot to discredit Islam and give the U.S. an excuse for invading Iraq and threaten Iran?

…Tens of thousands of people evidently think there’s something in it, “if” — magic phrase — “you keep an open mind.” I’m coming to think the truth is that if you keep an open mind people will throw all their crap in it — and as often as not have you pay them for doing so.”

Counterstrike is something like a bright photographic negative of a night scene, displaying evil through its contrast with goodness. Not only is it an enjoyable entertainment, it’s a “beat to quarters” to defend the truth, for its own sake and for the sake of all the things we cherish, that depend on freedom.

Highly recommended.

About the Author

Lars Walker is a librarian and Norwegian translator, and the author of several published fantasy novels, the latest of which is an e-book called Troll Valley, available for Kindle or Nook.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (12) |

Booker | 5.6.11 @ 7:47AM

"There has been murderous rioting in England, and Sharia Law is taking hold there".
Would we seriously expect anything less from Mr Colebatch? And I suppose the Queen is revealed as an Al Qaeda warlord and radical imams are posing as morris dancers? On top of that, we're now also responsible for Pearl Harbour, apparently. Why not throw in Korea and Vietnam as well?
This sounds like a bit of a giggle, and I'll look out for it in the bookshop bargain bins at the end of the summer. Incidently, I wonder if Harry and Leonie are the same pair who used to feature in Hitachi adverts when I was a kid in the 80s? Or maybe that was Hugo and Leonie.

Occam's Tool| 5.6.11 @ 11:00AM

Mr. Booker:

what is the most popular boy's name in the UK?

Bob K.| 5.6.11 @ 8:27AM

Booker,
Could Vietnam and Southeast Asia in general have ended up any worse if we had never been there?

Bob K.| 5.6.11 @ 8:45AM

Regarding conspiracy theories, and he was not thinking of conspiracy theories, I'm sure: William Blake said in "Auguries of Innocence:"
"A truth that's told with bad intent
Beats any lie you can invent."

Colebatch the poet should love that! As I recall in a very recent article here about 2 days ago on the Royal Marriage and it's music, he had nothing good to say about Blake. But then he is a Lawyer first, I'm sure.

JP| 5.6.11 @ 9:02AM

Sounds interesting. A different kind of story. I stopped reading espionage about the time Clancy went into semi-retirement.( Clancy himself isn't that good of a writer. But his plots make up for his prose and one-dimensional characters). Most are so predictable, cliche, and poorly written. I hope the book is on Kindle.

Dai Alanye | 5.6.11 @ 11:00AM

It has been pretty well shown that if you wish to sell eBooks it is wise to price them under five dollars. They are, after all, generally bought on impulse. At $19.99 it appears Counterstrike the eBook has been priced to protect sales of the paper volume. I'd suggest the electronic version be offered for $4.99 or even $3.99, hoping that those who like it will subsequently order the dead-tree version.

Bob K.| 5.6.11 @ 1:16PM

Then if it is not good it can disappear down that great electronic "memory hole" like our comments here do!

Although I doubt that Orwell ever contemplated such a literal result when he first used that phrase in "1984."

Kevin Dunn| 5.6.11 @ 12:14PM

Truy Kindle for a cheap copy - though it may be a couple of weeks before its asvailable yet.

Dee See| 5.7.11 @ 1:34AM

ALAN WATT years ago revealed the FACT
that most all thriller, science fiction, pulp and
bestseller authors are secretly funded by NGO's
and up. All of them are there to steer the 'thnking'
(ie programming) and to promote, by various
techniques, 'the agenda'.

This has been the set-up since the end of WW2.
In some cases since the First World War.

NOW do we understand WHY literature, cinema,
art etc. have died?

Bob K.| 5.7.11 @ 9:02AM

Good grief!!!

Bob K.| 5.7.11 @ 9:01AM

Good Grief!!!

Dee See| 5.8.11 @ 10:24PM

---Life AIN'T a Charlie Brown comic strip.

WAKE UP and GET REAL------------

More Articles by Lars Walker

More Articles From Buy the Book

http://spectator.org/archives/2011/05/06/hal-colebatchs-counterstrike-i

ADVERTISEMENT

Most Popular Articles

Obama and the IRS: The Smoking Gun?

Jeffrey Lord | 5.20.13

My Generation’s Disease

Benjamin Brophy | 5.17.13

The Liberal Union Behind the IRS

Jeffrey Lord | 5.16.13

Not Ready for Primetime Players

Daniel J. Flynn | 5.17.13

Assessing a Week of Scandal

Matt Purple | 5.17.13

Oops, Maybe Government is Tyrannical

Marta H. Mossburg | 5.17.13

It's.The.Law

Ross Kaminsky | 5.20.13

ADVERTISEMENT