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Missing
Missing | Thomas Hauser
4 posts | 1 read
The Pulitzer Prize nominated book that served as the basis for the Oscarwinning movie starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek. Charles Horman was an American freelance journalist and documentary filmmaker who had traveled to Chile in the early 1970s to explore a country that was undergoing significant changes under the then-Marxist President Salvador Allende. In the course of his research, Horman seems to have uncovered information about CIA involvement in a plot to overthrow Allende. In fact, the coup did take place with General Augusto Pinochet taking over as dictator then ordering the mass arrest of thousands of dissidents and opponents. Horman was one of thousands of people who was dragged from his home and never again seen alive. The American Embassy refused any assistance. It seems that Horman was murdered by Chilean security police, although this was never publicly acknowledged. Hormans father, Ed, a patriotic American businessman, traveled to Santiago where officials of the American Embassy, led by the ambassador himself, offered to help him search for his sonbut these same embassy officials knew that Horman was dead. Published in 1978, five years after Pinochet took over Chile, Missing is a harrowing tale. It is an explosive story that touches on political matters that are still relevant today. Hauser calmly sets about laying the groundwork for his story, examining both the facts as well as the more mysterious elements of this true story.
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azulaco
Missing | Thomas Hauser
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I finished this book weeks ago. I needed some time to process it. Pretty horrible that the US government could engineer a coup in a foreign country, then fail to help its citizens stay safe in the resulting unsafe conditions. I am appalled at the Cold War era “organization men” who were careless in the aftermath of the coup, deliberately delayed helping US citizens who they felt were of an objectionable stripe, then tried to cover it up.

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azulaco
Missing | Thomas Hauser
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It turns out that I‘m not such a fast reader when I‘m on nonfiction. Still reading this one. Still fascinating. I keep highlighting and making notes, and I‘ve gone down several rabbit holes researching the Chilean coup of 1973 and subsequent years of misery, especially the human rights violations. I knew, but I didn‘t know everything. I‘ll be lucky if I ever get past #chile in #readingtheamericas2023.

Librarybelle I love rabbit hole books! 1y
BarbaraBB The Pinochet years are very interesting 1y
14 likes2 comments
blurb
azulaco
Missing | Thomas Hauser
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I think this is going to be my #chile read for #readingtheamericas2023. True story of an American journalist who went missing in the wake of the Pinochet coup. I remember when the movie based on this story came out (starring Jack Lemmon and Sissy Spacek), but I was too young to be interested. I had no idea it was about a political disappearance in Chile. I‘m so interested in this history that took place during my childhood, while I was oblivious.

Librarybelle Sounds interesting 1y
BarbaraBB I remember being so young too! 1y
13 likes2 comments