Ratings4
Average rating4.5
The Names by Don DeLillo is a fascinating but somewhat fuzzy book. Set primarily in Greece, it tells the story of James Axton, an American who develops risk analyses, those odd-sounding reports used by international investors and insurers. When the book was published in 1982, would readers have suspected that Axton worked for the CIA? It was the first thing I thought of.
But Axton's work is only a part of this intricate story about language, alphabets, secrecy, and cultural identity.
See the rest of my review here