I received THE BLACK TULIP as a Christmas gift when I was in high school from my father, if memory serves me correctly. I tried reading it back then, and then set it down, because back then, I wanted the immediate and violent action of the Mack Bolan or Richard Marcinko novels.
Recently, I decided to pick the novel back up and give it a spin.
I would say that I wish I would have read it earlier, but the truth of the matter is that I was not ready to read it as a high school student. Now, as a GWOT veteran and student of counterterrorism strategy and history, I can fully appreciate Milt Bearden's novel.
THE BLACK TULIP follows CIA paramilitary contractor Alexander Fannin, a first-generation American, as he conducts unconventional warfare operations in Afghanistan alongside the mujahideen against the Soviet Union's formidable 40th Army. The stakes rapidly escalate from geopolitical to personal as Fannin and his KGB counterpart, Alfa Group Major Klimenko, dance dangerous choreography that could easily lead to both their demises.
My issue with Bearden's prose is that it is minimalist to the point of doing a lot of telling where it should be doing showing. The detailed descriptions he does provide are brilliant and paint an immaculate picture of the locales, whether they be Moscow, Hong Kong, or Afghanistan, but a lot of the time, the descriptions are too sparse to the point of being bland.
However, the descriptions notwithstanding, THE BLACK TULIP is a page-turning thriller. It is not for those not knowledgeable about the intelligence community or about the Soviet-Afghan War (unless you are willing to research on the fly), but Bearden definitely flexes his knowledge and his experience through his prose. It reads with the voice of those who have walked the path.
I'd recommend it to anyone looking for a fictional account that will make one wonder just how much of it is fiction and how much of it is fact told in fiction.
One more note: at one point, one of the characters notes that the mujahideen will more than likely turn on their American advisers. Given that the book was written in 1998, Bearden definitely saw the writing on the wall regarding the then-upcoming Global War on Terrorism.