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Paul Vidich

Autor/a de An Honorable Man

7 obres 351 Membres 26 Ressenyes

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Obres de Paul Vidich

An Honorable Man (2016) 103 exemplars
The Matchmaker: A Spy in Berlin (2022) 81 exemplars
The Coldest Warrior (2020) 52 exemplars
The Good Assassin (2017) 46 exemplars
The Mercenary (2021) 42 exemplars
Beirut Station (2023) 26 exemplars
The Coldest Warrior 1 exemplars

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Having just read The Mercenary, Beirut Station turned up really quickly in the library and this one was had far more tension in it. There were moments when I had to read quickly to see what happened.

Analise Assad works for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees but is also a spy, known only to the CIA and Mossad and is at the end of her tour. Problems always occur at this point in a spy's time in a place, and it being Beirut, there are always plenty of problems. Here, Najib Qassem must be assassinated because he wants to kill Condoleezza Rice on her peace-making visit. It's complicated already! However, there is a murderer also working in the city and the two plots end up combining and becoming one.

There are car bombs, the bombing of Beirut suburbs by Israel and many deaths in this twisting and turning novel and it exposes us all to the many moral issues that arise when working in such situations. Should Qassem be 'taken out' in his car when he has his grandchildren with him? Should Mossad/Israel be driving or enacting America's foreign policy? Is Mossad really the 'best' at espionage? Recent activities in Israel and Gaza suggest not and yet here they seem supreme in their abilities. (I accept that the book was written before these events.) I was also interested in the role of journalism in places such as this where information gathered by spies or journalists is all information. Should journalists be used in this way? Does it put them in more danger?

There were a couple of things in the book that I thought stretched the imagination a little. Would the CIA be using a house that Philby had lived in as a safe house? Why was Philby referred to so often in the second half of the book? He didn't really contribute to the plot.

When asked to describe the book in 5 words, two of the words Vidich used were 'love story'. Yes, there is a strange love story between Analise and Corben, a journalist, but the bigger love story is with Beirut, what it used to be and the degradation of that to what it has become. Revenge is a big theme in the book, as is remembering what Beirut used to be like. Neither are about living in the present and that may be one of the challenges of the place.

Every spy book I pick up claims that the author is the next John le Carré, including this one. But Vidich isn't. Not yet.
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allthegoodbooks | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Feb 3, 2024 |
Old-style, cold war spy work goes on in this story. It is the time just before Gorbachov becomes President of the Soviet Union and a KGB officer wants to defect and has asked for a particular Intelligence officer to handle his case. It's just that this Intelligence office no longer works for the organisation and is a man who decides himself how things will be done. It's a classic plot, get the defector out before anyone notices and they and their handler are caught.

The muddying of the waters in this case is that the handler, Aleksandar Garin, has form in the Soviet Union for failing to get an earlier defector out of the country and so he is known to the KGB and others. There is also a love interest in the form of a beautiful ex-ballet dancer who now works for the KGB who survives but who is let down by men time and time again.

There is action, quite a lot of it, guns and drugs, and of course leaks in both the CIA and KGB and it is the political turmoil that the Soviet Union is undergoing that Garin takes advantage of to exfiltrate GAMBIT.

All the building blocks are there but somehow it doesn't quite work. I got a little lost with all the Russians involved and the parts they played and somehow the whole storyline was a bit staid, never really got going. I enjoyed it enough to read more of his work but this may not have been the best of his books to start the Vidich reading journey with. I have Beirut Staion on order at the library. Not giving up, yet.
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allthegoodbooks | Hi ha 2 ressenyes més | Jan 28, 2024 |
I haven't read a spy novel in a long time. This was fun.
 
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ellink | Hi ha 3 ressenyes més | Jan 22, 2024 |
Paul Vidich has scored another bulls-eye with his latest spy-thriller, BEIRUT STATION. I should probably confess up front that I've been a Vidich fan since I read his THE COLDEST WARRIOR a few years back. It was so good that I immediateky backtracked and read his two earlier novels, AN HONORABLE MAN and THE GOOD ASSASSIN, which were equally good. Since then I've enjoyed THE MERCENARY and THE MATCHMAKER from this prolific and accomplished writer. Taken all together, his novels demonstrate Vidich has done his homework and knows well the inner workings of the CIA and the often deadly intrigues of international espionage. Indeed he has gradually, one book at a time, created a cast of unique characters that may well equal those of the late John le Carre, who gave us George Smiley and company.

In BEIRUT STATION, Vidich gives us Analise Assad, a young Lebanese-American agent engaged in a hunt for Qassem, a notorious terrorist in the midst of the 2006 Israeli-Hezbollah Thirty-four-Day War. There is a colorful supporting cast, including Corbin, a NY Times reporter in search of a big story (and Analise's sometime lover), the mysterious Bauman, who may be a Mossad operative, and Aldrich, the CIA station chief in Beirut, an "old hand" in the twilight of his career, who remembers drinking with Kim Philby in a Beirut bar just before Philby's disappearance and infamous defection to Moscow.

Analise is no CIA rookie, having already survived a stint in wartime Iraq, but as events close in on her, and she goes into hiding, fearing for her life, she is forced to recognize the real possibility of betrayal and so makes her own plans. In the end we are left with a sense that this may not be the last we will see of this resourceful, gutsy young woman.

For those of you who mourned the recent loss of the master of espionage, le Carre, take heart. This guy Vidich is quickly building a brand in the genre, and let me tell you, he is damn good. Try him. You'll like him, I guarantee it. Once again, my very highest recommendation.

- Tim Bazzett, author of the memoir, BOOKLOVER
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TimBazzett | Hi ha 1 ressenya més | Jul 29, 2023 |

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Estadístiques

Obres
7
Membres
351
Popularitat
#68,159
Valoració
½ 3.5
Ressenyes
26
ISBN
52
Llengües
2

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