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To: kabar
The aspen blooming from the same root reference is odd to say the least.

So is Libby's book according to someone on Fox News. They didn't seem to think that it was that odd for Libby.

1,010 posted on 10/28/2005 8:39:42 AM PDT by kcvl
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To: kcvl

The more problematic part of the letter was Libby telling Miller what others had testified regarding communications with him. That could be construed as 'here is the story.'


1,066 posted on 10/28/2005 8:50:40 AM PDT by lugsoul
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To: kcvl
So is Libby's book according to someone on Fox News. They didn't seem to think that it was that odd for Libby.

You mean The Apprentice : A Novel Here is the amazon and publisher weekly reviews:

Setsuo is a young apprentice at a remote mountain inn in turn-of-the-century Japan, who falls in love at first sight of the beautiful Yukiko, one of a roving band of actors who have come to stay. Trapped at the inn by a blizzard is a larger group of strange travelers. Emotionally wrought by his feelings for Yukiko, Setsuo cannot see that he is getting involved in political skulduggery as he tries to fathom the increasingly odd behavior of the guests. The finding of a corpse and a mysterious small box keep the reader guessing too.--

Although set in Japan in 1903, Libby's first novel avoids the exoticism and antiquarianism of James Clavell and sets its own tightly dreamlike tone. Setsuo, apprentice innkeeper at an isolated mountain hostel in Northern Japan, finds himself marooned with a dubious cast of travelers during a blizzard. His youthful naivete unfortunately draws him not only to a mysterious young woman with a band of itinerant performers but also to a half-frozen and half-crazed visitor. When this stranger flees back into the storm, Setsuo and another guest separately pursue him, leading to robbery and murder. With rumors of political intrigue enveloping the action and the apprentice in possession of a Macguffin as enigmatic as a haiku image, Libby maintains a sense of mystery and claustrophobia through pared-down prose and minimalist characterization. Setsuo's love interest, for instance, is simply the "girl in the cloak of yellow fur" for much of the novel. Even after he learns her name is Yukiko, her actions, history and motives remain ambiguous to the end. Spare and muted, Libby's debut has distilled his diplomatic experiences in Japan with the U.S. State and Defense Departments into a subtle, if sometimes attenuated, story of innocence and temptation halfway across the world and a century ago.

1,081 posted on 10/28/2005 8:52:42 AM PDT by kabar
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