Rating: Summary: Generally enjoyable novel for the beach or a dreary afternoo Review: Good story idea with interesting twists. However, it predictable, with only a few characters fully developed. The ending (epilog, really) is too similar to too many other novels and TV stories-a wrap-up that cannot be told any other way. I prefer an ending that doesn't need an explanatory wrap-up.
However, it is fun and worthy of spending time with it.
Rating: Summary: Truth should always be guarded by a bodyguard of lies. Review: At the November 1943 conference in Teheran between Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill, the British Prime Minister made a remark that become a classic epigram: In war-time, truth is so precious that she should always be attended by a bodyguard of lies. The Unlikely Spy is about one of those lies.
Of all the secrets on both sides during World War II, none was so jealously protected nor so covetously sought after than the time and place of the Allied invasion of Europe. In his first novel, Daniel Silva, executive producer of CNN's Washington-based public affairs programming, has spun a top-notch yarn about protecting that secret and deceiving the Third Reich. This story probably has more deceptions within deceptions than any espionage novel since John leCarré wrote The Spy Who Came in From the Cold some thirty-five years ago.
It doesn't matter that we now know the invasion was successful and the Allies won the war. Silva uses his newspaper and television journalist experience to first entice and then propel the reader from happy, care-free optimistic pre-war days in America, England and Germany to the eve of the invasion. The journey begins in the North Shore homes of New York's very well to-do families and the campuses of England's finest colleges.
Silva has stocked this historical novel with at least twenty characters who have to be kept track of. This is a challenge for the reader almost as complex as that facing former history professor Alfred Vicary who carries the burden of deceiving the Germans with "a careful blend of fact and fiction, of truth and painstakingly veiled lies." Vicary was recruited straight off the campus by Churchill who lay in his tub at Chartwell while the academic removed his tweed jacket and, reluctantly, sat down on the toilet. In Germany, a worried Hitler chairs meetings of his intelligence chiefs, including Himmler, to review efforts and increase the pressure on field agents to uncover the when and where of the invasion. Kurt Vogel, a lawyer destined to sit on Germany's Supreme court before Hitler scuttled the rule of law, is Vicary's opposite number, charged with learning the date and place of the invasion. He works directly for Admiral Canaris, head of German Military Intelligence, but is made to understand he can be hung with the same piano wire Himmler has planned for the admiral if his efforts fail. Vicary and Vogel never meet eye to eye but like great chess masters they put their pieces into play with cunning and are always thinking multiple moves ahead. Vogel is off to a fast start because he sent the sensuous and murderous Catherine Blake into England under deep cover before hostilities broke out. Vicary's efforts to catch up are made even more difficult by his own superior, Brigadier Sir Basil Boothy, who believes a counter-intelligence professional should be in charge rather than another of the PM's university recruits.
Silva has crafted a superlative tale peopled with real-life giants who strode across the pages of history during World War II and fictional characters who may be based on lesser known personalities. This tautly crafted spy story demonstrates proficient skills that will leave readers looking forward to Silva's second book which is said to be in production.
Rating: Summary: Well-written, easy to read, utterly predictable. Review: Just how in the world did the Allies ever pull off the
Normandy landing? With so many spies, double agents, deep
cover agents, and traitors eager to get the straight dope to the Fuhrer, are we really sure we're not living in the "Fatherland"? "The Unlikely Spy" slinks through very familiar territory, from "The Eye of the Needle" to "Where
Eagles Dare" with a side trip to Le Carre land thrown and an optional visit to "Enigma". From the first attention-grabbing brutal murder, through the
obligatory sex scenes, to the stop them at any cost!
finale, the reader encounters the expected.
There are, however, worse ways to spend an evening than curled up with a beautiful spy, tenacious British cop, handsome American architect/officer/patsy, and the other usual suspects. We may know them all a little too well, but, we'll always have the Pas de Calais.
Rating: Summary: Stunning Debut Review: An engrossing and well written page turner, with complex but logical and believable plot and characters.
Well researched and detailed in the tradition of Follet and Le Carre. A terrific book.
Rating: Summary: Excellent, fast moving and elegantly scripted Review: The author weaves a multi-track spy thriller with care and apparent consideration for the reader.
The plot is direct, credible and attractive - the characters are full bodied and alive, the accuracy of the environment is thorough without the minutae of Clancy but also more physical that Le Carre.
Altogether an excellent book.
Rating: Summary: Taut, thrilling spy story Review: Mr. Silva has produced a grand World War II spy thriller in the tradition of Ken Follett and others. He has obviously done his research well and that is reflected in the gripping, page turning suspense.
His characters are believable and, even in the case of the spies, sympathetic.
Well done, Mr. Silva; I am eagerly awaiting your next effort.
Rating: Summary: Brilliant! Review: Author Daniel Silva has done his usual wonderful job with the book THE UNLIKELY SPY.THE UNLIKELY SPY is an old-fashioned thriller, in the vein of the great spy novels of earlier decades. Set principally in England during World War II--with detours to New York and Nazi Germany--it is a gripping story which keeps the reader turning the pages to see what will happen next. The plot is brilliant in it conception, in its breadth, and in the execution. Silva does a good job conveying what life must have been like in London during those hard years of World War II. His premise is that the Allies had to mislead the Nazis, carefully and deliberately, to misdirect them from expecting the invasion of Normandy, this being "misinformation" in the purest sense of the word. This novel focuses on the British Secret Service (precursor of the service in which the fictional James Bond is said to have been a member) and on exactly how they could structure this deception. There is a great deal of plausible detail, and some cliffhanging moments in Silva's telling. His research is awe-inspiring. Long as the book runs, there are a few subplots and earlier clues that remain unaddressed at its conclusion--or, alternatively, these are tied up too simplistically, too off-handedly, too incompletely, to do anything but cheat the engaged reader. Still, these few blips are insignificant in a work of this magnitude. Daniel Silva has proven that his talents are as good as anybody writing today.
Rating: Summary: Satisfying and Cunningly Plotted Review: Veteran journalist, Daniel Silva, makes his mark as a novelist with, "The Unlikely Spy," a quality World War II espionage thriller. The story centers on Britain's top plans for the D-Day invasion and Hitler's attempt to uncover the vital secret of the war; the time and place of the Anglo-American invasion of France. Working on behalf of Germany is the beautiful Catherine Blake, a ruthless Mata Hari type spy who will seduce, maim, and kill in order to help Nazi Germany achieve victory. Hand-picked by Winston Churchill himself is Alfred Vicary, a successful history professor. Vicary's job is to run "Operation Double Cross" for M15 England's couterespionage agency. It is known that Germany has spies stationed in England, but who they are and how to find and break them lands on the shoulders of Vicary. The war could easily be lost to Germany if vital information is leaked to Hitler. For Vicary, not only does he face the challenge of foreign enemies, but also he must deal with a few deceitful people in his own department, jealous of his designation by Churchill. The cat-and-mouse game begins to roll! Silva's book is not entirely original, you will see shades of Follet and Higgins throughout. Nonetheless, it is entertaining and the historical facts the story is based on are accurate. I believe Silva shows a lot of promise as a future force in the world of high-spy literature. With experience he should develop a style which is uniquely his own. He is definitely worth reading.
Rating: Summary: Tremendous Review: A few years ago I flew out to Miami and had some time to kill so I browsed the airport bookstore and picked this up. Started reading in the Terminal and couldnt put it down throught the whole flight. It is a tremendous espionage novel. Silva is extremely talented and he wrote a fantastic book.
I wont give it away, just going to tell you if you like espionage novels then go pick it up. Its Tremendous!!
Rating: Summary: Great WWII espionage thriller Review: This is Daniel Silva's first novel and a sure winner. A WWII thriller about Hitler's super spy who can bring down the entire Allied invasion. Great historical thriller. Daniel Silva does a terrific job with his characters and the description of life back then.
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