Book Brief: The Last Israelis

The Last Israelis
by Noah Beck
Genre: Military and Psychological Thriller
Word count: 85,000

Israel’s leader falls unconscious. Iran acquires nukes. History is now up to 35 Israelis. Ethnically diverse. Ideologically divided. On a nuclear-armed submarine.

Iran threatens to destroy Israel and now has the nuclear means to do so. Israel’s “second-strike” answer to this existential threat is the Dolphin, a submarine with nuclear-tipped missiles. But its crewmembers are a microcosm of the complex Israeli society they defend, making for a suspense-filled ride to Armageddon.

There are two descendants of Holocaust survivors; two native Arabic speakers (one Christian, one Druze); the son of Persian Jews who escaped the Iranian revolution of 1979; an Ethiopian who crossed Sudan by foot as a child to reach Israel; religious Jews who serve on a mostly secular crew; the atheist son of a Soviet Refusenik; an officer who holds right-wing views and another who – against navy regulations – stealthily attends leftist rallies; and the son of Vietnamese refugees saved by Israel in 1977 who is secretly gay.

There is also the rivalry between the captain and his deputy, and a childhood tragedy that haunts a sailor whose psychological wounds could explode unexpectedly.

The pressures of submarine life, threats at sea, and an unthinkable dilemma make conflict among the crewmembers inevitable. Sometimes the boiling point is reached only in a submariner’s dream, but at other times, the situation is terrifyingly real.

The divided men must struggle with the weightiest moral questions as they debate the toughest decision of their lives.

And decide they must. Because they are the last Israelis.

This book is available from Amazon, iTunes, Barnes & Noble, and the author’s website.

Noah, how did you come up with the title for your book? Does it have any special meaning?
The premise of the story explores the unthinkable scenario in which Israel’s last survivors are aboard a submarine. Being “the last” of anything is grave and overwhelming – as are the decisions that the last Israelis must make. The title captures the essence of what is at stake with Iranian nukes.

Who was your favorite character and why?
The captain, because he wields tremendous responsibility with great compassion. He clearly loves his family but also his country, and manages dozens of personalities/egos while trying to be as fair as possible in the hardest of circumstances. But I also like his deputy (and chief antagonist), an extremely principled man.

Does your book have any underlying theme, message, or moral?
Evil exists today as it did during the Third Reich, but potentially with even more destructive power. So the lesson from that dark period of history applies just as much today: if evil is not confronted and stopped, it will grow and keeping consuming the civilized world until defeated.

What would/could a reader or reviewer say about this book that shows they “get” you as an author?
Beck has taken an urgent geopolitical issue and dramatically brought it to life by exploring it from the perspective of 35 men on a nuclear-armed submarine. Through their differing worldviews and passionate philosophical debates, we investigate the deepest questions of military ethics and retribution. It’s a riveting and illuminating ride.

Give us an excerpted quote from your favorite review of this book: 
“…some of the fastest paced…gripping literature I have ever read…I would hold it up against the writing of even the most established writers of political/military thrillers.”

Where can people learn more about your writing?
http://thelastisraelis.com/

 

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