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Stamboul Train (Vintage Classic)
 
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Stamboul Train (Vintage Classic) (Paperback)

by Graham Greene (Author), Christopher Hitchens (Introduction)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
RRP: £7.99
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Product details

  • Paperback: 214 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage; centenary ed edition (7 Oct 2004)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0099478366
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099478362
  • Product Dimensions: 19.2 x 13 x 1.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 17,813 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories:

    #7 in  Books > Fiction > 20th Century Classics > Greene, Graham
    #66 in  Books > Crime, Thrillers & Mystery > Thrillers > Spy Stories

Product Description

Review
"A tour de force... The realist and the romantic struggle with each other... inducing a sense of breathlessness and urgency."
--L.P. Hartley
"Graham Greene had wit and grace and character and story and a transcendent universal compassion that places him for all time in the ranks of world literature."
--John Le Carre

Product Description
A gripping spy thriller that unfolds aboard the majestic Orient Express as it crosses Europe from Ostend to Constantinople. Weaving a web of subterfuge, murder and politics along the way, the novel focuses upon the disturbing relationship between Myatt, the pragmatic Jew, and naive chorus girl Coral Musker as they engage in a desperate, angst-ridden pas-de-deux before a chilling turn of events spells an end to an unlikely interlude. Exploring the many shades of despair and hope, innocence and duplicity, the book offers a poignant testimony to Greene's extraordinary powers of insight into the human condition.

See all Product Description

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Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Early novel contains the "bones" of Greene's later themes., 20 May 2005
By Mary Whipple (New England) - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)   
A sad cynicism lies at the root of Greene's dark humor in this very early (1932) novel, Greene's fourth book and the first entertainment to be written and published for a wide audience. A Jewish businessman, a lesbian journalist, her rebellious young companion, a dancer in need of a job, a Socialist physician wanted in Serbia for treason, and an Austrian thief meet and interact aboard the Orient Express on a trip from London to Istanbul (Stamboul).

Each person in this motley group hopes that some remarkable change will occur to him or her as a result of the trip, but though all eventually get their wish, fate has something devious up its sleeve for each one. These twists and turns, sometimes humorous and sometimes immensely sad, constitute the heart of the novel.

Unlike Greene's later novels, with their fully developed characters and religious themes, this novel's characters are often stereotypes, and the action is often designed simply to bring the characters down, showing that no matter what dreams or goals they may have, that ultimately they have no control over their destinies. Greene's later, much more intensely realized themes--sin and atonement, innocence and guilt, love of life and fear of death, piety and corruption, sex and religion--are missing here.

As the action unfolds and the characters are manipulated, the reader easily recognizes the "bones" of the themes which will later evolve in Greene's mature philosophical novels. As a series of tours de force, and as a glimpse into the creative process of a writer who, at this point, was just beginning to come into his own, this is an intriguing novel, loaded with insights, a fascinating and enjoyable read. Mary Whipple

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A train journey with a difference, 2 April 2008
Stamboul Train was the novel that made Graham Greene's name. Published in 1932, it catalogues a train journey that, a few years later, would have been impossible, a journey across Europe that was about to be changed for ever. The novel is set in a time when the Orient Express travelled from Western Europe to Constantinople across several borders, each of which that presented its own different challenge. Seventy-five years ago the continent was neither bifurcated by ideology coupled with allegiance of necessity, nor united by a desire for greater capitalist integration. It was also not a stable place, with the short-lived tensions of the Treaty of Versailles less than fifteen years old. To reflect this, Graham Greene presents Stamboul Train as a journey, almost a travelogue, with the setting of each part offering an informed relevance to the action. So we progress from Ostend to Cologne to Vienna to Subotica to Constantinople.

The book is highly cinematographic in character and is cast as a tangle of almost separate stories acted out by characters that mingle along the way. People join and leave the train. There's a love affair in a sleeper. A Jew is on his way to do deals in currants. A wanted criminal boards and leaves. A young thing is on her way to a job as a dancer. There's a political refugee fomenting revolution in his homeland. There's a lesbian journalist seeking to interview a famous popular writer. Stanboul Train is clearly not the eight fifteen from Pinner. Or maybe it is...

The action is both on and off the train as the characters' stories weave together to create a novel. And it is possible to read the book as an almost linear story, where everyone, as in a soap opera, is pre-occupied with their present to the exclusion of all other time. But Graham Greene goes further than this and gives us vignettes of political, historical and social comment. Miss Warren's interview with Savory, the writer, is an example.

Savory the writer is playing a part of being a writer. He has made his name selling books written from a Cockney point of view, at the time a euphemism for a down-to-earth, working class, perhaps therefore honest perspective. But Savory is unsavoury. His Cockney credentials are false, since he was born in beautiful Balham, far south-west of Bow Bells, and he claims an aspiration to achieve a re-creation of Chaucer's spirit to counter the gloom and introspection of modern fiction. But Savory reveals himself to be "a man overworked, harassed by a personality which was not his own, by curiosities and lusts, a man on the edge of a nervous breakdown." And Miss Warren, his interviewer, hates dealing with the impersonation that is stardom, the necessity to deal with another person as a commercial creation, a lie in the form of an advertisement. She earns a living from writing about such people, but yet she despises consumerism for its own sake, derides its pulpy products. She yearns to tell Savory that his books are rubbish, destined for the dustbin as fickle taste moves on, reorders consumer sentiment to ridicule its current eager choice.

And here, perhaps, we have Graham Greene revealing his own self-destructive, self-abusive darker side. He feels as unsavoury as Savory, producing these entertainments just to sell books, to make money, to indulge in his weaknesses. But what Greene's deprecatory self-analysis apparently did not like to admit was that he was always doing more, much more than this.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A tense plot among sharply drawn characters, 27 Jun 2006
By Philippe Horak (Zug, Switzerland) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
In this novel, Graham Greene tells the story of seven main characters who all embark on a train journey from Ostend to Istanboul. Coral Musker, a good natured variety dancer with a bad heart, Dr Richard John, Myatt Carleston, a Jewish tradesman dealing in currants, Mr Opie, a clergyman, Janet Pardoe and Mabel Warren, a couple of lesbian women, Dr Richard Czinner, a famous socialist agitator who disappeared from Belgrade five years before and is now returning to his country to stand trial and finally Joseph Grünlich, a notorious Viennese thief and murderer.
As the story unfolds, more and more is revealed to the reader about the characters' past, some having had a rather shady existence. Mr Greene skilfully shows how different personalities react and behave in a sort of mental struggle once they are thrown together and forced to spend three days in the confined space of a railway carriage. A short, tense and disturbing novel which shows that one rarely escapes one's fate. The reader, Michael Maloney, performs a commendable act, using an wide variety of accents. An excellent audiobook.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Magnificent
"Stamboul Train" was Greene's fourth published novel (1932) and, for that reason, is probably overlooked by many. In my view it ranks among the best. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Mr. Ross Maynard

4.0 out of 5 stars Lots of Character, little plot
Graham Greene's Stamboul Train is a picture of dark 1930's intrigue, set on a train journey through Eastern Europe. Read more
Published 16 months ago by Talc Demon

4.0 out of 5 stars Early Greene novel hints at the greatness to come.
A sad cynicism lies at the root of Greene's dark humor in this very early (1932) novel, Greene's fourth novel and the first entertainment to be written and published for a wide... Read more
Published on 4 Jan 2003 by Mary Whipple

2.0 out of 5 stars An Unentertainment
Contrary to other reviewers I found this slim "thriller" (Greene's fourth book, and first "entertainment") to be rather lacking in suspense. Read more
Published on 18 Oct 2001 by A. Ross

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