5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
disinformation, espionage, and misplaced idealism, April 15, 2005
This review is from: Agent in Place (Hardcover)
This is an unusual MacInnes book. For one thing, there is no romance plot. Also, there is no real central character. And the setting shifts dramatically partway through the book. It was strongly influenced by Watergate, the (one-sided?) rush towards detent, and probably most directly, the "Pentagon Papers."
It starts out from the point of view of a Soviet deep mole, now a Congressional aide in Washington DC. He is instructed to procure a certain document. The man who procures the document is loyal to the US, but thinks the least sensitive part should be published openly. So he leaks it to the press, but he has no idea that his friend is a Soviet spy. He leaves the spy alone with the document for a short time, and the damage is done.
Then the focus shifts to the the brother and sister-in-law of the dupe who released the document. The action also shifts to Europe, where a high ranking western spy (who had to flee Russia when the document revealed his identity) is being debriefed and protected.
But the Soviet agent turns up again, and so does the brother who exposed the document. And why is the escaped agent behaving so strangely? Is he who he seems?
The action intensifies as secrets become dangerous and lies become weapons.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Queeb if the Genre, June 15, 2009
I began reading Helen MacInnes' books when I was a teenager. Now that I have grandchildren in that age bracket, her books are still among the best.
The topics are well researched; the characters believable; locales graphically presented; the story line ties up neatly and securely on all points.
For anyone for enjoys spy thrillers - no matter what the era - Helen MacInnes is more than a good read. She is a must.
First reads should be "Decision at Delphi", "While Still We Live", "The Double Image".
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Helen MacInnes Never Disappoints., May 3, 2011
This review is from: Agent in Place (Hardcover)
Start with 'Assignment in Brittany' and work your way through all Helen MacInnes' books. If you like spy and espionage novels written by a woman who was there during the wars, this book "Agent in Place" will keep you interested throughout. Her characters become friends as they weave through the pages. It is as if you are there with them.
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