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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointing thriller, October 11, 2009
This review is from: Free Agent: A Novel (Hardcover)
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There's nothing worse than looking forward to being engrossed in a thrilling book, and then being disappointed. A good thriller should keep you turning the pages, ignoring meals, phone calls and bedtime so you can keep reading. The book spans over 20 years as Paul Dark,an agent for the British spy agency MI6, finds himself on the run from both his agency and the KGB. He deals with the relationship with his father, a fellow spy, and the only woman he ever loved, who was thought dead but now may be the one who betrays him. The narrative is a little dull and I found myself just not caring enough to really want to know what they were all about. Free Agent wasn't terrible, it just didn't keep me enthralled as I expect a good book to. The action is engrossing but the characters are shallow, so even though there is plenty going on, you don't care all that much because you don't care about the characters as much as you should.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Empty "thriller" with an uninteresting protagonist..., June 28, 2009
This review is from: Free Agent: A Novel (Hardcover)
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Looking back, I can't say where the book took a turn, but it didn't take long for the story presented to start getting bogged down in it's own details or, occassionally, lack thereof. The story had potential, but our narrator, Paul Dark, is a character that it is hard to like or dislike; he just tells us his story. Never knowing whether or not Dark (the name is a bit too cliche for my tastes, as well) is a good guy or a bad guy, a victim or a villian, doesn't help the story; I suppose this is meant to be a means of building suspense, but the author never really explains enough for the reader to know where our narrator stands, who he is. All characters are styrofoam cut-outs of the genre, with no real depth and nothing to make them stand out in the reader's mind. I found it difficult to recall characters that had disappeared from the story for a while. There were many characters that were so much alike that I couldn't remember which was which was which... I can't even classify this as a decent diversion. There just isn't anything about this story that causes me to want to read the sequel; and they made no mistake, at the end, in letting us know that this dreadful story would continue. The book is not thrilling, not mysterious, not suspenseful and when the finale finally arrives its not shocking, not interesting. I rarely rate a book 1 star as writing a book is a difficult task, but this certainly does not deserve a 3 star (average) rating. Its just a poor outing...
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Don't be misled by comparisons to Deighton, et al. Excruciatingly bad, July 24, 2010
The first thing you'll notice is the wretched writing: "...after that we'd spent the entire afternoon at her flat, pushing the sheets to the bottom of the bed."; "High stakes," he muttered, tapping his glass with his fingers" "...a chasm of despair opened up in my stomach." But after a page or two, you'll realize everything about this ridiculous book is fourth-rate. You've been suckered into buying a trite, silly, flatfooted counterfeit of an espionage novel. My copy features a stunningly dishonest quote from Christopher Reich on the cover. "I was...reminded of the best of Le Carre, Deighton and Forsyth." Bollocks. Consider yourself warned. Any Hardy Boy book will give you a more compelling read.
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