Most Helpful Customer Reviews
33 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Terrific!, February 23, 2007
I got to read an advance reading copy of this book, and found myself buying two copies for friends of mine. At first I thought "great, here's another CIA-thriller from some unknown author"...only to find myself immersed in the novel within only pages, and suddenly thinking "where did this author come from?"
Many surprises, a few violent deaths, and wonderful scenic settings. It's rare that all the elements come together as well as they do in this novel thriller.
But one warning -- the emphasis is on VIOLENT in the "violent deaths" sentence above. We're talking SIlence of the Lambs violent. Still, it's entertaining and fast paced, and truly surprising! I can imagine the folks in those studio offices in Hollywood jumping over each other to buy the movie rights.
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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
LeCarre's heir, March 11, 2007
Michah Dalton, a "cleaner" for the Company is called to Cortona, a small Italian town where his friend Porter Naumann has met a horrific end. Before the day is over Dalton is fighting for his own life with Croatian thugs and then a bright green spider.
Determined to avenge Naumann's death Dalton traverses the globe from a horrendous crime-scene in London to Langley to the badlands of Wyoming, Montana, and Colorado. At every turn he he encounters danger and loss of life. Yet he perseveres, sometimes by pure luck and sometimes by cunning and sometimes by military savvy.
George Smiley, LeCarre's quintessential Cold War spy confronted betrayal behind operation. Here it is duty that drives Dalton onward. But Dalton is also bright, literate and angst-riddled. If there is some betrayal lurking, it is not for me to say. But this book never lets go, never compromises, and never can be put down.
A new master spy designed for the Long War has emerged. May we see him again!
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17 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
an intriguing new protagonist, February 26, 2007
This review is from: The Echelon Vendetta (Audio CD)
Quite often discovering a new and intriguing protagonist is akin to making another good friend, someone you know you'll enjoy, a person you want to spend time with. Such was my feeling when first coming upon Micah Dalton in The Echelon Vendetta. He's unique, having formulated his own morality system. He's also very much aware of the best and the worst in people. Cynical, romantic, often approachable, courageous, determined all describe Dalton.
He works for the CIA as a "cleaner" - precisely what the name implies. It's up to him to clean up messes made by others or step in when undercover operations go dramatically awry. His best friend and mentor is or better said was Porter Naumann. It appears to have been suicide when Naumann's body is found in a chapel courtyard in the beautiful hillside town of Cortona, Italy.
However, Dalton isn't buying any of that suicide nonsense and decides to do a little investigating on his own beginning in Venice where Naumann lived. (Don't you love this author's locations?) The deaths of Naumann's family in London corroborate what Dalton was beginning to suspect - there's a mad man on the loose, a killer hunting those with ties to the CIA and someone has to stop him.
Known primarily for his outstanding work in stage productions, Firdous Bamji delivers a suspenseful reading of this too-close-for-comfort tale. His narrative is well paced, his diction scrupulous, and his voice masterful.
- Gail Cooke
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