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Jasmine's Tortoise: A Modern History Novel of Intrigue and Espionage Set in Baghdad and London
 
 
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Jasmine's Tortoise: A Modern History Novel of Intrigue and Espionage Set in Baghdad and London [Paperback]

Corinne Souza
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 400 pages
  • Publisher: Picnic Publishing (30 Nov 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0955610508
  • ISBN-13: 978-0955610509
  • Product Dimensions: 20.3 x 12.7 x 2.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,702,924 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Corinne Souza
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Product Description

Review

'Souza nails iniquity of Iraq adventure in her merciless novel . . . hinting that Lloyd's of London assisted sanctions-busters, she shows how intelligence-gathering combined with personal greed reached deep into political life in the UK and in other major powers . . . an exposure of deep-rooted hypocrisy, so close to the type of people we know and are expected to respect, it will send shudders of fear and shame down the spine of any decent person.' --JAMES BREWER, Lloyd's List

Product Description

On the eve of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, Children & Spies, an operative training manual written by former KGB General Nico Stollen, goes to the top of the Amazon bestseller chart. The crisis it provokes reaches into a perplexing world of 1960s politics, freemasons, diplomats, spooks and Jesuits. Which of the superpowers poisoned the Kurdish water supply? Why was Britain's defence secretary murdered twenty years later? What was the sinister history of the construction giant Fitzwilliams International, inherited by his widow, Jasmine Fitzwilliams? Blending historical detail with fiction, a huge cast is introduced as the narrative tracks the abiding friendship between three families: the Palmeiras - Roman Catholic Indian traders long based in Mesopotamia; the Solomons, one of the last remaining prestigious Jewish families in Baghdad; and the El-Tareks, a mixed Sunni-Shia Iraqi clan.Another trio - the British freemason Sir Julian Lawrence, the American Jesuit Father Anthony and the Russian Nico Stollen - seek to protect them from the malign intentions of MI6 officer, Peter Ligne.

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars More than just a "promising debut"!, 1 Jun 2008
By 
G. H. Fraser-sampson (London, UK) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Jasmine's Tortoise: A Modern History Novel of Intrigue and Espionage Set in Baghdad and London (Paperback)
It is fashionable amongst reviewers to refer to a first novel as a "promising debut", but "Jasmine's Tortoise" is much, much more than that.

Corinne Souza handles her subject matter with style and assurance, born it seems of deep knowledge and personal experience. The story ranges across continents and generations and is set against a political backdrop of impressive accuracy. The sheer scope and scale of it is breathtaking.

The writing is of the highest order (how refreshing to find a contemporary novelist who knows how to use a semi-colon, and employs words of more than two syllables) and calls to mind both John Le Carre and C.P.Snow. It will be interesting to see how Souza's style develops into a truly unique voice (which one has little doubt will happen) in future books. Descriptive writing, characterisation and plot are all of the highest order.

I would thoroughly recommend this book to anyone. In turns touching and awful, the story grips you. Yet this is much more than just a good story. It crosses over into the territory of a serious literary novel.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars What audience is the book intended for?, 25 April 2008
This review is from: Jasmine's Tortoise: A Modern History Novel of Intrigue and Espionage Set in Baghdad and London (Paperback)
Jasmine's Tortoise is the first novel of Corinne who has written non fiction books about her family's involvement in spying and her experiences as a lobbyist during the Major-Blair years. It is clear that much of Corinne Souza life is woven into the novel's mix of fictional and historical events that unfolds from1965 to 2002. Souza's father is clearly used as a source for Jasmine's father and she like Jasmine owes her British passport to the spy trade.

The book covers 40 turbulent years from the ellipse of the Puppet Hashemite monarchy by secular Arab nationalism to its eventual challenge by Islamic militancy and Kurdish nationalism. These local changes are shaped if not controlled by the ebb and flow of the big three imperial powers: Britain, America, and Russia, who gradually became the big two and then finally in the 90's just the big one. These complex social and political changes are explored through the fates of three families: the Palameries- Roman Catholic Indian traders, the Solomon's, the last of Bagdad's old Jewish families and the El-Tareks- a well heeled Muslim family with a presence in the old and emerging social-political elites.

The story starts in Bagdad when the British niceties of Masonic lodges, Horse Racing, dances and formal parties, are in the final throes of death with a family party. Tragedy is triggered when Jasmine is given by her grandfather. Peter Ligne, the local MI6 bureau spymaster claims it from him. This hurts her grandfather's feelings so his friend Nico Stollen, the KGB spymaster, is pulled into a rivalry to protect Jasmine. Thus starts a struggle for her "soul" that will see betrayal and death rip the families apart mirroring the wider betrayal of Iraq. Forty years later the younger generation and older family survivors fight for Jasmine's redemption as Nico Stollen and Peter Ligne pull the strings to the final moments.

The book is structured with a prologue setting out all the main characters and their relationship in 2002 before diving back to Bagdad in 1965. It then jumps in linear stages to 2002 and we follow the twists and turns of the characters as they die, marry, betray and manipulate with bitter and unintended consequences. Expect lots of twists and unexpected turns as the plot sets a good pace as you keep a track on who is who. If in doubt dip back to the prologue as the characters and their relationships are set out as if a route map.

Clearly an ambitious and multi-layer story so does it work? Only partly has to be the honest answer. The flaw is that the writing does not match the ambition of the story. The characters are often two-dimensional, and clichés with barely distinguishable voices but they do serve as effective pegs to move the plot on at a quick pace. And who complains when Fleming and Agatha Christies characters serve the same purpose?
We also have a POV that switches character within the same page as well as an irritating habit of the writer as untended narrator explaining words and actions. This would have been fine in a historical account but not in a novel as it all adds to effect of the reader being distant and observing rather then participating in the story. Again fine as long as the reader is interested in plot rather then character driven stories.

So is the plot credible? The opening prologue is over complex and slows the introduction to the story; this could have perhaps been better handled perhaps as a press interview of Jasmine so become a narrative that intrigues us. Nor do we have the back story of why key central characters are so loyal to each other. The importance given to British Intelligence, Masons and Employer associations stretches credibility. But Lodges were in the British Middle East until closed down in the mid 60's, and until the 90's employees with a radical past were black-listed and British intelligence did play dirty tricks with the Labour Party. And as for the corruption of the Government sponsored arms trade just read the latest news headlines! So the story is an exaggeration and simplification of the truth which will irate some readers but not all.

In the end, the potential fatal flaw of the novel is who is the intended readership? In wanting to explore the ambivalent moral and political issues of the modern world, it suffers in comparison with Graham Greene who managed to combine serious literary acclaim with wide popularity. Yet it lacks the technically detailed espionage and military science storylines of say a Tom Clancy or the focus on one heroic man, or a small group of crusading individuals, in a struggle against powerful adversaries of say a Robert Ludlum. Despite these reservations and limitations it is still a good holiday read but given a good cast, and screenplay it would really work as a mini commercial TV series.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Intriguing story, 22 Oct 2007
This review is from: Jasmine's Tortoise: A Modern History Novel of Intrigue and Espionage Set in Baghdad and London (Paperback)
Many players and families are introduced in this book, heavy start then opening up into an intriguing story, exciting with a good twist at the end. Looking forward to the next Souza Novel.
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