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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best of the trilogy,
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This review is from: Spy Line (Hardcover)
Spy Line -- the middle installment in the Hook, Line, and Sinker trilogy -- picks up where Spy Hook left off. Samson's loyalty is questioned, he isn't getting answers to his own questions about his wife's defection, people are dying, and people who seemed to die in the past aren't staying dead. More I cannot say without spoiling the intricate plot.Spy Line has more action than the previous novel. Samson proves himself an adept field agent even after years behind a desk. But he isn't a James Bond type superhero; he's a dedicated public servant who wants to uncover the truth even if his superiors would prefer that the truth be kept secret. The minor characters in Spy Line really shine: they bumble, they seduce, they act shamefully or unselfishly -- in short, they behave as inconsistently and unpredictably as real people, and real people is what they feel like. Deighton does a masterful job of bringing every character to life in this book. He also does a remarkable job of establishing a sense of place -- the reader feels present in (what was then) East Germany, feels the repression, the fear, the history. And he does a satisfying job of tying together the loose threads, of resolving all the outstanding plot lines. The story is compelling (even shocking) but this novel stands out for Deighton's portrayal of Samson as a man torn apart by his love for a treasonous wife, for his live-in girlfriend, and for his country (which doesn't treat him well at all). This novel is nearly as good as John Le Carre at his best.
5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great entry in the series...if you want a series....,
This review is from: Spy Line (Mass Market Paperback)
Its just another day in the espionage war in a divided Europe. The wall hasnt come down, and its an unending game of Spy v. Spy on both sides. At the outset of Spyline British agent Bernard Samson is in hiding in a dingy section of the divided and espionage-ridden city of Berlin. Why hes in exile isnt exactly clear to him, even as he does have some friends, or at least some human resources on which he can rely. He feels it may have something to do with his wife, Fiona, who disappeared after going over to the Russians. Allowed to return home to his new wife, Gloria, Samson thinks his problems are behind him. Instead, he soon realizes that something is brewing, something that will send him back across the wall, to tangle with a psychotic American who kills for any side that will hire him, and to finally confront his wife.Its clear that Spy Line is an entry in a larger series, one that began with Spy Hook (which it immediately followed) and culminated in Spy Sinker the complex relationships and their continuity are obviously much larger than any single book. (The Spy books themselves are also part of a much larger continuity one including the trilogies of Game-Set-Match, as well as Charity, Hope and Faith, as well as the WWII epic Winter). Line is also dwarfed by its shortness (for the quality of its writing, its not a long read; also the plot covers a brief span of time) and by the loose ends it creates (Fionas sister insists on accompanying Bernard into The East with disastrous results; and how will Bernard explain everything to Gloria?) without resolving them. Deighton is less concerned with resolving problems than in artfully describing the pain they cause. Unfortunately, that makes the book seem painfully unstructured like an episode of a TV show. Line like most of Deightons books, is worth reading for the quality of prose alone. However, the plot details which take Bernard from Berlin to London, and to Vienna, meeting stamp collectors, historians, ex-spies and freelance murderers seems above the book, implying that youll have to read all the Samson books. Its almost like a prison sentence, and clearly one that has taken its toll on poor Samson. In short a good book, but only great book if youre willing to read a dozen more.
4.0 out of 5 stars
5th in the series,
This review is from: Spy Line (Paperback)
I've always enjoyed spy stories, but I don't read all that many of them. As a result, when I run across one by a familiar author, I buy it and don't pay attention to chronology. Spy Line is the 5th in Deighton's Bernard Samson series. I'm pretty sure I read the 4th book, but have no clue about the others.British secret agent Bernard Samson's life has just become even more dangerous and confusing. Apparently, Spy Line picks up where Spy Hook leaves off, with Bernard on the run in Berlin, suspected of being a double agent. He starts putting information together from the bits and pieces he learns from various sources, and makes his way home to his girlfriend and children. Then he discovers it was all a setup, and that it has to do with his wife Fiona, who'd defected to the Soviet Union years earlier. Spy Line has a nice balance of exciting spy adventure and emotional turmoil. I particularly enjoyed Bernard's mixed emotions regarding Fiona. Len Deighton's writing isn't quite as obscure as John LeCarre's, but it's not all that straightforward, either. I'm not sure if I think that having to read between the lines a bit fits the subject matter, or if it's just that I'm used to reading spy novels by these two. Still, I think I'd have enjoyed it more if it had been written in a clearer style. One of these days, I need to make myself a checklist and read these books in order so I get more out of them.
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