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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Samson Returns...
In the post-communist world, the Cold War espionage genre may seem a little dated. We have other concerns and fears on our minds now. But for reasons I'll get to below, this novel series is a stand-out from that era, and still well worth reading.

This book was actually written after the fall of communism, but the plot takes place a few years before it. In this...
Published on April 15, 2005 by David C. Hoffner

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dour Samson goes it alone
"Faith" is the first of a trilogy in the long -running drama of Bernard Samson, British agent, loner and habitual skeptic.

The time is late 1987. Reunited with his wife, Fiona, after her successful mission in East Germany has leapfrogged her ahead of him up the intelligence hierarchy, Samson still chafes at being kept out of the loop by his wife.

As revealed...

Published on November 3, 2003 by Lynn Harnett


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Samson Returns..., April 15, 2005
By 
David C. Hoffner (Hebron, IN United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Faith (Paperback)
In the post-communist world, the Cold War espionage genre may seem a little dated. We have other concerns and fears on our minds now. But for reasons I'll get to below, this novel series is a stand-out from that era, and still well worth reading.

This book was actually written after the fall of communism, but the plot takes place a few years before it. In this book Samson returns to work for London Central and deals with a disastrous assignment in East Germany; an internal struggle to keep positions in a down-sizing agency; etc.

The book plot is interesting enough, but running alongside it are several series-length plots that continue to engross the reader: can Bernard and his wife Fiona rebuild their marriage after her apparent defection and return? In fact, can Fiona even recover from her ordeal? What about Gloria?

I just recently re-read the entire Bernard Samson series (of which this is the seventh out of nine novels). It is one of the best novel series I have ever read, and certainly one of the best espionage genre series ever. There are so many things to like about this series - the in-depth characterizations; the pithy observational asides about people and cultures; the references to multiple languages and their subtleties; the gritty European settings; the hidden plot developments and character motivations that the narrator either can't or won't see; etc.

The author claims that each of these books can be read on their own, and perhaps they could be. But you can get a lot more enjoyment out of it if you start at the beginning with _Berlin Game_ (or even better yet - start with the WWII prequel: _Winter_).
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars unbeleivably good, August 19, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Faith (Hardcover)
The three trilogies written by len deighton about Bernard Samson are second to none. They are gripping, from start to end.

Although nowhere near as good as the first 2 trilogies, faith hope and charity is still a fantastic set of books, and deserves nothing less than 5stars.

I only started reading spy game last week, and already I have finished all 9 books ... and will probably re-read them all again sometime soon.

They really are fantastic! no matter what type of book you are interested in (I prefer lawyer and detective stories) you will just love all 9 of these books!!

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best of the 10, December 15, 2004
This review is from: Faith (Paperback)
My favorite in the entire series! Faith lacks the action/suspense of earlier works but attains near-perfect distillation of Samson's dry humor and solitary perspective. I laughed out loud repeatedly. I suspect the humor is all the more enjoyable having waded through pages and pages of the earlier books to wring out mere droplets of Samson's bitingly funny sarcasm. The journey here makes it all the better. Of course, I am biased; Deighton can do no wrong in my eyes.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Dour Samson goes it alone, November 3, 2003
"Faith" is the first of a trilogy in the long -running drama of Bernard Samson, British agent, loner and habitual skeptic.

The time is late 1987. Reunited with his wife, Fiona, after her successful mission in East Germany has leapfrogged her ahead of him up the intelligence hierarchy, Samson still chafes at being kept out of the loop by his wife.

As revealed in the previous trilogy, Fiona's defection to the communists was an elaborate ruse, and her husband was among those successfully hoodwinked.
Brooding over his relations with Fiona and his feelings and obligations toward Gloria, the young woman who came into his life during his wife's absence, Samson takes on a dicey mission in East Germany. A Russian military man wants to defect and has requested Samson as his contact.

Samson's unease is quickly justified as he and his inexperienced assistant arrive at the meeting point to discover a dead man - their Russian, apparently, has been assassinated.

With his usual flair for nightime chases and crafty double-crossing, Deighton mixes personal agendas with political maneuvering. Friends, lovers and colleagues lie and few things are what they seem on the surface.

Samson ducks his own agency in order to follow his instincts and, against his better judgment, gets mixed up in two mysteries - the odd circumstances surrounding Fiona's sister's death, and the equally peculiar, if unconnected, circumstances around the killing that ended his East Berlin mission.

In setting up this new trilogy Deighton poses questions about Fiona's stability as well as the future of the Samson marriage and the fate of Gloria, Samson's appealing lover. The political picture is even murkier and the book ends with most of its mysteries intact.

Although this and all other books in the Samson series are meant to stand alone, readers unfamiliar with earlier volumes may have difficulty understanding motives and some of the subtly barbed dialogue. Deighton fans should enjoy the atmosphere and dialogue although Samson's dour personality has become a trifle grating.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The spy business is a rotten apple, November 9, 2005
To write a long trilogy on the very last months of the DDR from the point of view of the British Secret Services in 1994 is « nearly » anachronic. So the author chose a completely different approach than a simple spy story. It is a real novel with real and thick characters who do have a social existence and a cultural density. The « action » is slower of course. And the object of the novel is not to show us one more of those unbeatable James Bond.

The object of the novel is to explore the human and unhuman, definitely unhumane, functioning of London Central. Incredible conflicts between field-agents and bureaucrats, the severe hierarchization of these bureaucrats in the number of square meters of office space they get, with or without a window, with carpet or linoleum on the floor, etc.

This constant inside strife is the main characteristic of London Central. The plot of the book will peter out because field agents have no say, and bureaucrats forget essential elements. The bureaucrats dream theories that bite the dust when implemented, at times with casualties, and yet they will survive with essentially two methods. 1- They will put the blame on their underlings (and there is condescendence in this attitude) ; 2- They will cover up the failure with a false explanation that will make a KGB or Stasi agent become a sniper in London and use an American weapon and all the night equipment necessary.

They will of course try to cover up the nature of the weapon. For that reason the book is interesting. We are under the surveillance and control - constant control - of secret services who are the most conflictual pot of spiders in the world. We don't know them. We have to trust them. And we may find ourselves under crossfire. Bad luck and that has not changed since the end of the Cold War, far from it.

The advantage of this system was that it more or less shortcircuited terrorism. Nowadays we still have the conflictual antagonistic secret services plus the various terrorist organizations that provide some discontents with the possibility to express their anger at, or their ambition in, their society and world that are the cause of their discontentment.

Dr Jacques COULARDEAU, Université Paris Dauphine, Université Paris I Panthéon Sorbonne
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5.0 out of 5 stars Superior service, October 16, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Faith A Novel (Hardcover)
Book arrived within 2 or 3 days, beautifully wrapped, and i excellent condition. First rate service all around.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Number Eight in Len Deighton's Superb Ten Volume Spy Epic, May 22, 2008
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This review is from: Faith (Paperback)
Although I have always been more a fan of his quick-read spy thrillers that spawned the Harry Palmer movies, Len Deighton's most accomplished delineation of the Cold War spy has to be his ten-volume epic torment of Bernd Samson. Beginning with "Winter," to set the background, moving quickly through "Game," "Set" and "Match," to set up our hero, and salting the wounds in "Hook," "Line" and "Sinker," lest our master op relax, this epic enters the end-game in Deighton's "Faith," being the eighth volume and first of a concluding three volume set. If you love, as do I, that complex web of intrigues and betrayals that typify the lives of our anti-heroic Bonds and Palmers, then you'll relish this near endless revel. Deighton is a master of the set-up: He runs his protagonist down a danger strewn path while allowing scant justification for the hero's sleazy use of allies and corruption of the occasional bystander, and inevitably drops his agent and the reader into bewildering mire that should have been obvious at the outset. As with all his novels "Faith" keeps the faith, delivering an engrossing narrative that stands alone for a quick thrill. But, for the deeper read, start from the beginning of this tale of a man who was born to spy.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Spy Stories, July 17, 2000
This review is from: Faith (Paperback)
Len Deighton is the master when it comes to Trilogy spy stories. One cannot help but pull for Bernard Sampson (and Werner) as he enters a new adventure in the almost long forgottton "Cold War". If you have enjoyed Deighton's other works, you will no doubt enjoy this book and the others to follow.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not as good as the first trilogy, but pretty good., July 5, 2000
This review is from: Faith (Paperback)
The books are getting very mealoncholy. Bernard still loves Gloria and his wife, but is torn between them. His wife is a wreck and he's practicaly being forced to take her back. Also Deighton confuses the reader because now Fiona's dead sister may be alive in a Stasi prison. Still even though the plots gone down hill the next novels worth checking out to see what happens to Bernard.
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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars left me wanting to read the next book "Hope", December 12, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Faith (Hardcover)
I don't particularly like spy novels, but I really enjoyed this book. I just finished "Faith" and I can't wait to read the next book. I found it easy to read and follow, which in my opinion is the drawback of most spy novels-the plot too convoluted and tiresome. This book is well worth reading.
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Faith
Faith by Len Deighton (Hardcover - Jan. 1995)
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