Excerpt:
The suicide bombing which slaughtered nearly two dozen concertgoers in Manchester last week demonstrates yet again that terrorism is indeed becoming "part and parcel," as London's Muslim mayor Sadiq Khan declared, of European life. And yet the continent's elites continue to live in denial of the religious roots of that terrorism. Few are willing to tell the truth about Islam and its impact on Europe; even fewer have dared to tell that truth in the gripping way that only fiction can. Controversial French novelist Michel Houllebecq's bestselling Submission, for example, recently struck a chord among readers with its chilling tale of Europe's embrace of sharia. And then there is Bruce Bawer's new novel The Alhambra.
Critic, essayist, and political journalist Bruce Bawer is the author of over a dozen books, most notably While Europe Slept: How Radical Islam Is Destroying the West from Within (2006), Surrender: Appeasing Islam, Sacrificing Freedom (2009), and The Victims' Revolution: The Rise of Identity Studies and the Closing of the Liberal Mind (2012). He is a native New Yorker who has lived in Europe since 1998, and who continues to report on the continent's decline and fall from the front lines. Full disclosure: I am honored to say that Bawer is a friend of mine.