Loaded: A Misadventure on the Marijuana Trail
by Robert Sabbag
Little, Brown & Company
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Without ruining anything for anyone, I think it's fairly safe to give away the book's closing line (excluding the epilogue): "'I was just thinking,' he said, 'this would make a great movie'." Intended as a ho-hum moment, I'm sure, it also points to what is both a defining feature and a fundamental problem of the book. Sabbag, it seems, would most of all like to write for Hollywood. There's little in here of any literary merit per se, and the sole focus is on the forward drive of the narrative. Everything that's said, it seems, should be directly and immediately transposable to visuals. And when there's in fact little of interest actually taking place -- apart, perhaps, from airplanes almost, but not quite, crashing, over and over again -- there's not much here to get too excited about.
Never a really bad book, it still leaves a lot to be desired. There are hints of brilliant poignancy both in Long's over-spending and almost desperate life in luxury at the heights of the game, as well as in his eventual rather sad attempts at pulling out of it. However, Sabbag inexplicably steers away from those more human-drama elements, instead focusing on another airplane engine that needs an oil shift or one more bale of marijuana that's not up to standard. It's an easy and quick read, if that's what you're looking for, but look elsewhere for something profound and truly satisfying.
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Stein Haukland

