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22 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Littell's masterful tale of revenge, deceit, espionage, and honor, October 6, 2005
Robert Littell's novel, "The Sisters," sets the high water mark for espionage thrillers. Brief at just over 300 pages, convoluted with plots within subterfuges within deceits within double-crosses, and populated with a murderer's row of spies and assassins, "The Sisters" thrills with its expertise as it awes with its audacity.
The titular Sisters are actually two men, Carroll and Francis, "the sisters death and night," who work for the Central Intelligence Agency. Their job is simple - to plot. Littell wrote this book during the Reagan era, so the natural target of the Sisters' gigantic, non-linear minds is the Soviet Union - even though Littell never specifically mentions the year during which the novel is set, it's perfectly clear that we're at the height of the Cold War. As chock full of idiosyncrasies as they are brilliance, the Sisters contrive the perfect crime . . . a crime that will shock the world and for which the blame will fall squarely on the U.S.S.R.
This dastardly plot requires the unwitting assistance of one of Littell's great creations, the Potter. An aged dwarf living out his years with his shrewish wife, the Potter is a now-disgraced member of the Soviet intelligentsia. Once a highly successful "novator," the Potter trained "sleepers," who were undercover agents who could live anywhere in the world, waiting to be "activated" for a "job." Betrayed by his own government, the Potter has lost all his sleepers except one . . . his last, best Sleeper. The Sleeper who is the son the Potter never had.
But the Sisters have a reach that extends well beyond the Iron Curtain, and soon the Sleeper has been set on a path to commit the Sisters' crime. The Potter, who can pierce the murkiest of hidden motives, understands that his cherished student is at great risk, both to himself and for his country. And in a classic thriller's plot development, "only the Potter can stop him."
Demonstrating a firm command of both the "tricks of the trade" as well as life in the Soviet Union, Littell keeps the reader flipping the pages as the Sleeper gets closer and closer to committing the crime of the century. Littell also masterfully doles out the hints to the reader so that while never explicitly explained, the Sleeper's (and the Sisters') intended crime becomes monstrously, horrifyingly clear. (If you don't recognize it at first, never fear, you will.)
A must for fans of espionage thrillers, "The Sisters" demands to be read and refuses to be put down. Building on a solid foundation of well-drawn characters in an exhilarating plot, "The Sisters" builds to a crescendo of revenge that will cause the reader to return to Page 1, eager to spot all the author's clues that led to this shocking yet logical conclusion. All in all, a definitive thriller.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The sisters Death and Night, September 26, 2004
In the wake of Littell's bestseller, "The Company," Overlook has reissued three of Littell's Cold-War novels, classics of sly black humor and switchback, labyrinthine plotting. These include his first, "The Defection of A.J. Lewinter" (1973), about a low-level American scientist who defects to the Russians - or does he? Then his 1990 novel, "The Once and Future Spy," pits the CIA against the CIA in a twisted tale of dirty tricks and history.
But "The Sisters," a conspiracy of conspiracies, is the apex of Littell's diabolical wit. Plotting is the vocation of the title characters, Francis and Carroll, old CIA hands, known to their leery colleagues as "the sisters Death and Night" (Walt Whitman), and the story opens with their obscure and hilarious conception of "the perfect crime." They are too careful - communicating in cryptic written notes which are shredded at day's end - to let anyone, including the reader, in on what this crime might entail, but its instrument is a Russian sleeper - an unactivated spy living secretly as an American.
To find him, the Sisters must suborn the Potter, a disgraced and retired KGB officer, the former head of the Russian sleeper school. His last and best pupil, the one the Sisters seek, is also the son he never had. But, between threats and bribes, the Potter betrays him, as he knows he will. The action picks up as the Potter flees Russia and then his CIA "protectors" in order to intervene and stop his protégé from committing the crime that will reverberate around the world.
Narrative shifts among the various characters - the Sisters, the Potter, a Cuban assassin whose role remains a mystery until things are well advanced, a couple of Russian masterminds, a pair of Canadian assassins and the debonair, reluctant, but well-taught young Sleeper - all of them plotting and counterplotting.
As a number of these chase each other across the country, Littell's black wit and deft storytelling keep the pages turning. The Potter, a hapless, likeable fellow, despite his cold-bloodedly ruthless side, acquires a civilian sidekick and the reader's sympathies. As the story comes together with a bang, first-time readers will gasp at Littell's masterfully inclusive cynicism and readers familiar with the twists will marvel again in sheer appreciation. This is a conspiracy fan's uber-conspiracy.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Just one little thing ..., September 23, 2010
WARNING! SPOILER!
I agree with those who enjoyed this book. The plotting and humor are a delight, as is the general level of intelligence.
But I couldn't figure out at the end why the Potter was dragged into the affair. The Soviet "Cousins" knew the activation code (they sent the postcard from New York with the Whitman house and the code on it) and it was their instructions the Sleeper followed. So why did anyone need to go to the trouble of comprising the Potter's sleepers and discrediting him at the KGB?
The true nature of Francis was a total surprise to me.
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