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Showing posts with label historical based thriller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label historical based thriller. Show all posts

Friday, July 28, 2017

Review - The Paris Spy

I have followed and reviewed each of the books in the Maggie Hope series:  #1 Mr. Churchill's Secretary (click here), #2 Princess Elizabeth's Spy (click here), #3 His Majesty's Hope (click here), #4 The Prime Minister's Secret Agent (click here), #5 Mrs Roosevelt's Confidante (click here), #6 The Queen's Accomplice (click here), and a wonderful interview with Ms. MacNeal (click here).  Today I review the newest addition to the series, which can be read as a stand alone, if you haven't read the six prior books.

Author: Susan Elia MacNeal

Copyright: August 2017 (Bantam) 320 pgs

Series: 7th in Maggie Hope Intrigue series

Sensuality: Medium on violence and adult themes

Mystery Sub-genre: Historical Amateur Sleuth, Historical Intrigue

Main Characters: Maggie Hope, a spy who started as Churchill's secretary

Setting: 1942, Nazi occupied Paris

Obtained Through: Netgalley - Publisher for honest review

From the book cover: "Maggie Hope has come a long way since serving as a typist for Winston Churchill. Now she’s working undercover for the Special Operations Executive in the elegant but eerily silent city of Paris, where SS officers prowl the streets in their Mercedes and the Ritz is draped with swastika banners. Walking among the enemy is tense and terrifying, and even though she’s disguised in chic Chanel, Maggie can’t help longing for home.

But her missions come first. Maggie’s half sister, Elise, has disappeared after being saved from a concentration camp, and Maggie is desperate to find her—that is, if Elise even wants to be found. Equally urgent, Churchill is planning the Allied invasion of France, and SOE agent Erica Calvert has been captured, the whereabouts of her vital research regarding Normandy unknown. Maggie must risk her life to penetrate powerful circles and employ all her talents for deception and spycraft to root out a traitor, find her sister, and locate the reports crucial to planning D-Day in a deadly game of wits with the Nazi intelligence elite."

Maggie, who originally started out as Churchill's Secretary and is now a Major.  She had already completed an assignment where she was air dropped into Germany...This one is just as dicey. She is looking for an agent she fears has been captured and her half-sister who escaped a prison camp in Berlin.  Sarah, Maggie's old roommate and former prima ballerina now spy is having her metal tested on her own extremely dangerous mission.  Hugh, an old flame of Maggie's now Sarah's love, is posing as Sarah's husband for their mission.  Jacques, Maggie's Paris contact for her dual mission, is a charming Frenchman.  Even Coco Chanel makes an appearance.  Then there are the various departent heads back in England that seem oblivious to glaring clues that the Paris spy network has been compromised.

No romantic Paris in Springtime glow fo the setting. As Maggie's contact described it: " 'It's the only rule you'll need while you're here,' he whispered, mirth gone from his eyes. 'Easy to remember: Trust no one.  Nothing is clear here. Everything is shadows.'"

I've heard much about England's suffering under the Luftwaffe bombing raids, but little about Paris.  Paris went from being like champagne, light and bubbly to a tripple-shot expresso, dark and nerve wracking.  But the author highlighted that many French collaborated with the Nazi's because of the continual lies spread that the real threat was the communists and convinced them to partner with Germans.  The propaganda is clear in hindsight, but in the midst of it so many succumbed to the lies.  It is such details woven into the story that makes the reader feel you have just witnessed history first hand as you read, I certainly did.

The plot is classic intrigue with rarely a safe feeling moment. One slip of a word can blow your cover.  Maggie's dual missions are one plot, but Sarah and Hugh's are another plot.  Eventually, they all converge.  This builds the tension like a Hitchhock thriller.

With such suspense through the story, it is hard to pull off a nail-biting climax.  Yet, it happens in this case.  Even the wrap-up ends with a major shock that took my breath away.

Another stellar addition to the Maggie Hope series. The plot has the very direction of the war at stake without the spies involved being aware.  The characters are real, in some cases you feel their anguish and pain.  Throw in some twists and a final surprise to have a powerhouse of a novel.  As always, I love the historical notes at the end to fix in my mind how much was based on fact - always an eye opener.

Rating: Near Perfect - Couldn't Put it down. Buy two copies, one for you and one for a friend. If you haven't read the prior books, buy all of them while you're at it.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dBLqYYOoD3Y


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BOOK GIVEAWAY


The publisher has agreed to do a giveaway of The Paris Spy.

Giveaway entry lasts until Friday August 4 6:00 p.m. (MST).  U.S. entries only please.

The Publisher will be shipping the book to the winner.

How to enter:

*** First, you must be a member (follower) of this blog.***

All entries are to be in the comments for this post.

I shall notify each winner via the email address you provide to get your mailing address and have the prize sent directly to you.  If I don't hear from you in 3 days, I will select another winner and notify them.

** IF you are a member (or email subscriber) of this blog, you only need to leave a comment with your correct email.

BECOME a member (or email subscriber) of this blog if you aren't already and enjoy the celebration of all things mystery and suspense.

Good Luck!





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Thursday, August 6, 2015

Review - The Lost Treasure of the Templars


I was excited about a thriller book from a bestselling author that incorporated the intriguing lost Templar treasure.  With praise like: “James Bond meets Alex Cross…check out James Becker.” (Fresh Fiction) I thought this would be a great summer read.  Well, not exactly.  Find out my take below.

Author: James Becker

Copyright: July 2015 (Signet) 528 pgs

Series: Standalone Thriller

Sensuality: some graphic violence, occasional swearing

Mystery Sub-genre: Thriller

Main Characters: antiquarian bookseller Robin Jessop, Tech geek David Mallory

Setting: Modern day, Dartmouth Devon - England and Greece

Obtained Through: Publisher for honest review

Robin Jessop gets a medieval book, but quickly finds out it is a cleaver book safe. Opening the book safe is tricky, one false move and you are severely injured.  She manages to open it without injury and finds and ancient scroll titled Ipse Dixit and is clearly in some ancient cypher.  She then does two things that create the rest of the story:  she contacts a book buyer of medieval cipher texts, and does an internet search on Ipse Dixit.  


The man she contacts for help in deciphering the text shows up only hours before hit men who are backed by a ruthless shadowy religious organization who monitors websites, blogs, and internet searches for that phrase.  The result is Robin and David are thrown together, running for their lives.  They attempt to decode the scroll, which appears to reference a lost treasure of a Templar outpost hidden by one of the last Grand Masters...and prior treasurer, of the Outremer chapter of the Templars before it was defeated in battle.

Robin Jessop maybe an antique book seller, but she grew up racing cars and learning martial arts, which is a little over-the-top and convenient.  David Mallory is a computer guru who can spoof their internet connection so they can't be traced online as they research, and just happens to be an expert on all things Templar.  Marco Toscanelli, probably a sociopath, heads the sadistic assassins chasing Robin and David.  I appreciated the author doesn't through gratuitous sex into the mix, which is rarely apropos when running for your life.  I have to comment that character development, even for a thriller, is very sparse in this novel.  I can't give you any emotional or psychological profile because there aren't any hints of either.  What I have mentioned here is about all you'll get.

The setting runs the gamit from the English countryside, to Beirut, then Sidon in Lebanon, and finally Cyprus Greece which lends and international flavor and interest to the story.  The plot had tremendous potential because it is truly suspected that potentially billions of Templar coins, jewels, gold/silver ingots, and other artifacts have been hidden for centuries since the overthrow of the order didn't find near the money and assets they possessed.  


But, sadly the pacing dragged with too much history - usually given in lonnnnnnnng dialog sections (info-dump disease).  If it wasn't the long historical dialog speeches, it was long paragraphs imparting detailed descriptions of techniques for decoding the scroll, or even minute details on a car chase.  Only a few sections actually had heart-racing scenes, and those were too little and spread too far apart to keep any action going.  Honestly...I struggled to finish each chapter.

**Spoiler Alert**
So the pacing dragged except in a few scenes, but I still wanted to find out what happened, how it all turned out, do they find the treasure etc.  There is an interesting confrontation in a network of caves with the assasins...good, not great (because there is no good reason given why these cold-blooded sadistic killers wait to eliminate Robin and David). But, and this is the real kicker...there isn't any definitive resolution about the treasure by the end of the book. 

**End Alert**

If this were supposed to be a series, then it would be a great lead-in to a follow up book for the next leg of the adventure.  But, that doesn't appear to be the case, since the teaser included of another book at the end is a completely different storyline with new characters. That was a disappointing ending, really!   

I try to allow for people's tastes being different from my own, and I love thrillers - particularly historically based ones, but I have to call this one as I see it.  This novel is problematic with the pacing issues (The 500 pages could have easily been trimmed down to 300 pages and the story would have benefited from the weight loss), and lack of character development of any kind, then to have the final slap of leaving major questions unanswered at the end was too much for me. 

Rating: Okay – A few good points, but with significant flaws. Suggest you get via Library/swap/borrow if you want.



Here is a great piece that goes into the true lost treasure, and provides a good Templar overview.




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