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Rating:  Summary: Different but Excellant! Review: I was first introduced to Hopscotch "The Movie" and when I finally found the DVD version I decided to get the book to see what differences I would find.The differences are vast, yet not to far apart. I found the book excellant. I preferred the personality of the books character as to the overall story and I also found the movie character extreamly satisfying. I have both now and have enjoyed them in their own right. The movie is timeless and the book well worth several readings over time. Get the book, get the DVD, enjoy both and expect differences that will not detract from either.
Rating:  Summary: Different but Excellant! Review: I was first introduced to Hopscotch "The Movie" and when I finally found the DVD version I decided to get the book to see what differences I would find. The differences are vast, yet not to far apart. I found the book excellant. I preferred the personality of the books character as to the overall story and I also found the movie character extreamly satisfying. I have both now and have enjoyed them in their own right. The movie is timeless and the book well worth several readings over time. Get the book, get the DVD, enjoy both and expect differences that will not detract from either.
Rating:  Summary: Spy put out into the cold wants back in for his own reasons Review: Miles Kendig is a man with a mission--his own. When he is forcibly retired from service in the Agency (CIA), he comes up with a plan to put himself back in the hotseat: exposing the dirty tricks the Agency has played. Of course, this irritates his former employer and a world-wide manhunt is on. I bought this book thinking it would flesh out some of the details the movie, which I dearly love, wasn't able to expand upon. What I found was that the two are quite dissimilar. The premise is the same, as are the names of most of the characters, but don't for a minute think if you've seen the movie, the book is redundant. It's a different story in many ways. If you enjoy an extremely well thought-out, well-timed and well-researched edge of your seat novel, this is the one. The movie, a delightful comedy starring Walter Matthau, is in a much lighter vein. I unreservedly recommend both. And I plan on finding more of Mr. Garfield's books!
Rating:  Summary: Spy put out into the cold wants back in for his own reasons Review: Miles Kendig is a man with a mission--his own. When he is forcibly retired from service in the Agency (CIA), he comes up with a plan to put himself back in the hotseat: exposing the dirty tricks the Agency has played. Of course, this irritates his former employer and a world-wide manhunt is on. I bought this book thinking it would flesh out some of the details the movie, which I dearly love, wasn't able to expand upon. What I found was that the two are quite dissimilar. The premise is the same, as are the names of most of the characters, but don't for a minute think if you've seen the movie, the book is redundant. It's a different story in many ways. If you enjoy an extremely well thought-out, well-timed and well-researched edge of your seat novel, this is the one. The movie, a delightful comedy starring Walter Matthau, is in a much lighter vein. I unreservedly recommend both. And I plan on finding more of Mr. Garfield's books!
Rating:  Summary: fabulous espionage thriller Review: Though supposed to be above politics, the Agency is embroiled in internal politics that reacts to external pressures from the White House and Congress. Thus, it is not surprising that his employers force long time out in the cold agent Miles Kendig to retire. A man used to living beyond the edge in which every breath could mean death, Miles finds middle age life in America boring as he misses the adrenalin rush that his field missions provided him.
Several years pass. Miles is ready to get back in the game on his terms. This time he will be a rogue exposing the world espionage units to the public as unscrupulous dirty tricks in which murder or ruining someone is a way of life and collateral damage is acceptable as long as the mission is accomplished. Competing spy agencies form strange bedfellows with one quest: destroy Miles before he exposes them. Gleefully, Miles, a veteran of twenty-five years of field work, looks forward to the ultimate cat and mouse game, in which he tossed down the gauntlet.
This is a terrific spy thriller that sort of reminded this reviewer more of the Bourne Identity (second movie) than the Mathau film Hopscotch. Though the novel is from the late 1960s early 1970s, the story line remains fresh because the Cold War is more of a backdrop except that d'entente existed when it is convenient for all parties to fight the common cause, a lone ranger. That intrepid individualism that is rare to see in a society filled with profiles and spin doctors is what makes Brian Garfield's thriller hold up as a fabulous espionage thriller.
Harriet Klausner
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