Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
New departure, 1 Dec 2001
By A Customer
The world of spies and counter-espionage took something of atumble when the Berlin Wall came down. What do spies do these days? The answer, says Bill James, is either fight big-time internbational drugs smugglers and thieves or defect to them. The book's main character, Simon Abelard is of mixed race and comes from Cardiff's docklands. In a way he's the token black in the security service and he lknows it. But he's also very good at his job, even if he does regard himself as a glorified cop. Abelard is set on to the trail of a former colleague who has strated. Trouble is, the crooks are after him too, and they play a dirty game. This is a departure from Bill James's usual Harpur & Iles novels, but readers will want to know that the same wit is present and the plot is as much of a page-turner as ever. More Abelard please, he's great!
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Ho Hum Spy Novel, 24 Feb 2004
Post cold-war spy novels have all been grappling with the fundamental "what now?" question that arose following the collapse of the Soviet Union. This first of a new series is very much part of that stocktaking, as a British intelligence agent is sent to track down a former colleague who's gone rogue. Simon Abelard is a mixed-race Welshman from Cardiff's mean Tiger Bay streets, and the token darkie in his section. His colleague Julian has been putting his covert skills to work for drug dealers, and has gone missing after diverting around $9 million into a Swiss bank account. James uses this plot to make heavy weather of how in the post-Cold War era, spies have nothing worthwhile to do and are thus more susceptible to the lures of the almighty dollar.This is a somewhat shaky setup—spies have always been tempted by fiduciary inducements, and have always been liable to run their own games on the side. James doesn't present any new twists on this theme and without any new ideas to propel the narrative, it simply becomes a very elaborate game of who's conning who, as a bevy of Simon's higher-ups get involved in the case. Indeed, the majority of the suspense comes not from the chase for Julian, but from Simon's uncertainty as to who in the large cast of bizarre secret service muckity-mucks is corrupt and who the nasty men also after Julian are. Eventually, of course, a woman gets involved, only heightening the conventionality of the proceedings. Everyone speaks in code, doublespeak, and innuendo (except for Simon's delightfully straight-talking mother), but it rarely feels real or even probable. Fortunately, everything is laid out in a visceral style that really captures the grimy side-street hotels and cold-hearted sides of London and Paris. It's the kind of book that lets itself be read, but by the end one is left with a bit of a "so what" feeling. I'm very unlikely to read the sequel, A Man's Enemies.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
From the cover............, 4 April 2007
First in a brilliant new series from the creator of HARPUR & LIES
Simon Abelard, black Oxford graduate from Cardiff's dockland, was recruited by British Intelligence to be a spy. However, since the Berlin Wall came down he finds that he's working as a glorified cop.
Then Abelard is given the dangerous job of bringing back a colleague who's changed sides. But Julian Bowling has not defected to the Russians, the Chinese or the Iraqis. Instead, he took advantage of his security service training to become a major crook. Now, he's taken millions of dollars belonging to the crooked syndicate he helped create, and the ruthless drug-dealers he robbed are after his blood.
As the bodies begin to pile up, Abelard finds himself fighting not only for his own life, but also for the lives of his loved ones.
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In the 21st Century, the spying game is changed forever.
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THE OBSERVER: "British mystery fiction's finest prose stylist."
SUNDAY TIMES: "Bill James is a frontrunner among those who have turned the police procedural on its head."
CRIME TIME: "As a thriller writer James is in the very top bracket"
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