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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Second installment in classic spy trilogy, December 9, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Mexico Set (Mass Market Paperback)
Still reeling from his wife's defection Bernard Samson is dispatched to Mexico City, accompanied by his boss, the obnoxious Dicky Cruyer. Their mission: To enroll a KGB agent who may, or may not, have knowledge that will help clear up the mysteries surrounding the defection of Bernard's wife.

The book provides an entertaining portrait of Mexico in the early '80s, as well as the incompetence and self-serving attitude of Britain's Foreign Service.

While the book can be enjoyed in its own right, it is part of a series, and as such can be best enjoyed when read as such.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars There is no 'love' in the tennis match of espionage, March 14, 2004
By 
Larry Scantlebury (Ypsilanti, MI United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Mexico Set (Hardcover)
This is the second novel of the Bernard Samson trilogy which begins with Berlin Game and ends with London Match. The story opens with Dicky Cruyer cursing at a pedestrian in a Mexico trafic jam. Interestingly enough, Mr. Deighton shows us the pedestrian 400 pages later to see if we've been paying attention.

Samson, a professional MI-6 field operative, is devastated by the defection of his wife, Fiona, to the other side. Read KGB. Read the evil empire. To all that ask him 'if he still loves her' he denies he does. But Mr. Deighton leaves any number of clues for his readers to make us know that at best, it's just false bravado.

Handicapped somewhat emotionally by the strain of realizing that their whole marriage, the children, the shared experiences was but a stage she played upon, Bernard must also face the onslaught of accusatory hearings from his employers at London Central, the 'deskmen' lacking any field experience where hard men do the hard things that he hates so much.

We see the old characters Frank Harrington, the Iago-like Dicky, the self serving Bret Rensselaer, and his close friend for life Werner Volkmann and Volkmann's straying wife, Zena.

Deighton's humor is subtle and droll. When faced with a dilemma Dicky says "Muy BLOODY complicado," Bernard thinks 'that's only because he doesn't understand.'

Blood is spilt, sometimes innocent blood, sometimes not so innocent. Bernard is loyal, confused, older, tripped up by forces that should be aiding him but who have their own agendas. Erich Stinnes, the KGB officer who interrogated him in East Berlin says to him, "I hate deskmen." Samson replies "Me too. They're bloody dangerous."

Excellent read about the life and death struggles of the alphabet agencies of the 70's and 80's. You don't have to read Berlin Game first but it helps. Things are different now . . but maybe not. Maybe there are just different letters. 5 stars. Larry Scantlebury

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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Tennis anyone? 'Game' to Fiona, 'Set'..., February 19, 2001
This review is from: Mexico Set (Mass Market Paperback)
...as yet undecided, in this the second book in the 'Berlin Game', 'Mexico Set' and 'London Match' spy trilogy featuring Bernard Samson. And what a contest this is - Bernard's wife - Fiona stunned most of us in the first book by being exposed as the long serving KGB mole inside MI6. She won that 'game' by defecting East, having done her damage and leaving more behind. Bernard is shattered. He exposed Fiona but is now under suspicion himself (MI6 is wondering - can you be married to a 'mole' for over a decade and not know? or is he one himself?).

Bernard has a chance to redeem himself by bringing in Erich Stinnes, Fiona's KGB assistant who is supposedly defecting. Off he goes to Mexico to debrief Stinnes, but soon questions arise and Bernard is again in a fix. Is Stinnes a Fiona 'plant' designed to further discredit Bernard and convince London that he is KGB? or is he genuine? Poor Bernard. Amidst all this he has to contend with political infighting in MI6, unwanted advances from his sister in law, Tessa and deal with self doubt and guilt over Fiona. He often wonders whether the collapse of their marriage and Fiona's betrayal was all her own doing or did he have something to do with it.

Suffice it to say the plot unfolds suitably and all the above questions are satisfactorily answered.

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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Bernard Samson is a gem., October 30, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Mexico Set (Paperback)
This book can standalone as a good spy story, but only reaches excellence when read as part of the trilogy - Berlin Game, Mexico Set, and London Match. The tension ebbs and flows throughout the trilogy, but it isn't until the climax of London Match that we see the full scope. Highly recommended!
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great series, July 4, 2000
This review is from: Mexico Set (Mass Market Paperback)
Bernard Sampson is back and dealing with the tragedy he experienced in the last novel. Bernard Sampson is a character who puts James Bond to shame because he is simply more realistic. Don't read this novel if you haven't read Berlin Game.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, realistic spy trilogy a'la John Le Carre', May 16, 2011
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This review is from: Mexico Set (Hardcover)
If you're a fan of realistic spy novels (as opposed to the James Bond and Jason Bourne absurd comedies), then you'll already know the novels of John Le Carre'. Len Deighton is Le Carre's only equal.

In these cold-war spy novels, guns are seldom used, but if used, actually maim and kill people. The most important weapons are brain power and knowing whom to trust, on your own side and on the enemy's side. The bluffs and counter-bluffs, deep moles and obvious fools are a joy to follow through these novels. The constant battle between the "desk" spies and the "front-line" spies makes for a wonderful underlying tension between co-workers. Competition with the other British and American intelligence organizations makes for yet more fun. Seeing the opposing side mixed up in the same silly and frustrating power games is another source of realism and joy in these novels.

"Mexico Set" is the second in the trilogy, so be sure to start with "Berlin Game" and follow with the concluding "London Match". Even though the books are readable independent of one another, and do not leave you "cliff-hanging" from one book to the next, you'll get maximum enjoyment by reading them in order.

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4.0 out of 5 stars you need to read all nine, August 29, 2010
Mexico Set was a good book but it's part of a set of nine that seems to climax with number six, Spy Sinker, which unravels a lot of plot points that continue from book to book. In the last three books (Faith, Hope and Charity) Deighton seems to be unwinding the careers of Bernard and his faithful companion Werner in order to end the series and retire. Too bad.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Not Free SF Reader, November 4, 2007
Wife traitor repercussions.


Bernard Samson's wife is at the heart of his dilemma. Revealed as the KGB mole, his own organisation is viewing him with some suspicion for being fooled, despite any successes just obtained.

One of his wife's KGB colleagues is looking to defect, and he has to travel to Mexico to make this happen. It all gets rather complicated as he suspects that, as you would, it might be a setup.

Just as interesting, this novel, even without the startling familial revelation of the first of the trilogy.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars very good read, March 31, 1998
This review is from: Mexico Set (Mass Market Paperback)
close to Le Carre's best. highly readable and believable.
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Mexico Set
Mexico Set by Len Deighton (Paperback - September 17, 1987)
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