For 18 years, Peter Gaines traveled the globe as one of the CIA's top agents. Suddenly he is fired. But Peter refuses to let go, especially after his final assignment at the CIA-operated sex-shop, the... This description may be from another edition of this product.
This is a well crafted thriller, all the more disturbing by the fact that it is true. Beautifully written with astounding honesty. You will not be able to put this little gem down. Gilboy is the undisputed master at storytelling.
An American Dostoevsky Writes a Spy Thriller
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 27 years ago
It is no less thrilling than the best of the spy genre: a real page turner. But Operation Fantasy Plan reminds me, too, of the best Russian literature -- Dostoevsky comes to mind. Peter Gaines (the protaganist) is constantly driven to action. At the same time he is forced to question the very meaning of humanity and morality, exploring the questions of what is good and evil (if even there is such a thing) and of what differentiates love from lust (if anything). You'll have to decide for yourself whether Gaines chooses the best path in the end, and you will be thinking about it for a long time after.
The Mayor of Yigo and the CIA
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 28 years ago
This is another boonie dog book review from Wolfie and Kansas. The plot of Peter Gilboy's "Operation Fantasy Plan" is similar to an idea that was circulating around Guam. The Mayor of Yigo, a village in northern Guam, professed concern about boonie dogs allegedly raiding trash cans and barking at caniphobes. He proposed tying up a female dog in heat in the middle of an open field, using her as bait to catch male boonie dogs. We boonie dogs came up with the counterproposal of tying up a hot human female in the middle of an open field, and seeing how many mayors and other politicians we could catch. In "Operation Fantasy Plan", the CIA uses a plan similar to ours, setting up a brothel in Bangkok to entrap and blackmail prominent humans.While a one-sentence description of the plot of "Operation Fantasy Plan" makes it sound like a collaberation between Ian Fleming and A.N. Roquelaure, this is actually more of a John LeCarre-type book. Gilboy focuses on the psychology of the main character, an obsessed ex-spy who seeks to make amends for his involvement in the Fantasy Plan, and on the morality of an ends-justifies-any-means intelligence policy. While "Operation Fantasy Plan" was not the light read we expected, it is an interesting, well-paced book.
Much more than another "page-turner!"
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 28 years ago
Generally, I want more substance from a novel than a spy thriller has to offer. Not so with Peter Gilboy's debut, OPERATION FANTASY PLAN. This book is a beautifully crafted, thoughtful, intriguing, tastefully sensual piece. Set in Washington and Thailand, the novels explores the implications of a complex scheme to entangle Japanese leaders in compromising sexual encounters that will later be used to coerce information and cooperation with the CIA. The book's central character, Peter Gaines, is at times a hero and at times a scoundrel. Gilboy artfully extracts the complex and conflicting loyalties, thoughts and passions of Gaines as he explores the ethical limits of what the CIA can and will do to protect our national (economic) interests. A must read for those who bemoan the loss of the Soviet threat and for those who might enjoy a page turner if it had something of substance to say.
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