Joe is working for the Peace Corps. His country assignment? Turkmenistan. Formerly part of the Soviet Union, Turkmenistan is a tiny country with very little power. While there, Joe meets a man named Azat. Azat adopts Joe as a friend and invites Joe into his world. Soon Joe finds himself in the middle of ill-begotten adventures, exploring some of the dark sides of this small kingdom. What stands out here is Lonergan’s way of presenting what it is like to be from a small, relatively powerless country like Turkmenistan. There’s a scene in the book where one of the characters asks Joe to take him to America. When Joe says that the man will need a visa, the man tells Joe he should call the president of America and tell him what a nice person this man is, so that he will get a visa. In countries like Turkmenistan, the populace has much more access to the people in power than they do in the United States. Using the framework of Joe’s experience in Turkmenistan, Lonergan contrasts what it’s like to live in a country like this and how it’s different than living in the United States.