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Hardcover Spy Hook Book

ISBN: 0394551788

ISBN13: 9780394551784

Spy Hook

(Book #4 in the Bernard Samson Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

What Bernard Sampson, protagonist of BERLIN GAME, MEXICO SET, and LONDON MATCH, is about to know may hurt him. When word gets to London Central that a cache of millions of pounds has disappeared inside the Service, Samson is determined to learn the truth. But not even that discovery will help if the Department itself wants his blood....

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Another great trilogy!!

After GAME, SET & MATCH Deighton ups the pace with a much shorter book. Deighton reveals a little more about his characters while our hero becomes increasingly baffled. A terrific hook for the rest of the series

Overtaken by history

The action follows that of London Match, and I don't think it's giving anything away to say that it ends with a cliffhanger forcing you to read Spy Line, the next in the series. Samson the wearied but enthusiastic British spy who is the hero of this series, is a rerun of Palmer of the much earlier Ipcress File. Many of the same situations recur. Even the bumbling fellow passenger on the plane is a rerun. The plot, as in all the others, hinges on which British spy will turn out to be a mole working for the Russians. Much of the action takes place in a divided Berlin. This was published in 1988 so the end of the Cold War was about to out-date it in a way, but it's still great entertainment. One group of Deighton fans regards this series as a falling off from his earlier stories. They are more conventional in a way, but this partly refects that Deighton and Carre were being imitated, rather than that Deighton was yielding to fashion.

Hooked on a new Bernard Samson series

The start of the 2nd Trilogy, following on from 'Game, Set and Match'. This story starts with the problem of missing funds (1/2 million pounds). Bernard, ever the gopher and trouble-shooter (or is it just that he get's things done) is sent to Washington to find out what Jim Prettyman can tell London about the missing funds. Jim's not talking. First, he refuses to tell Bernard anything and then, just hours later, is apparently murdered. We're off. On another Deighton intrigue, this one resolving itself in California. Along the way, Gloria (Bernard's girlfiend) introduces him to Dodo, a Hungarian ex-spook that used to work for the West. He seems to know things - about the money's use, about what's going on in the service, about Bernard's father's intelligence work in WWII. All of this has implications for the plot - perhaps the most convoluted and satisfying of the series.Bernard's trip to California reveals surprises, by way of persons, thought gone, but whose appearance here helps explain the disappearance of the money and what it is being used for.

Very interesting, although somewhat convoluted.

Interesting Brit-style spy novel, the first of a three-book series. I was very interested in the topic, yet had a little trouble keeping all the characters straight, making it somewhat convoluted. But there is enough action, and very little offensive language or situations, to keep me interested. I am ordering the next book, "Spy Line," today.

The best of a unique series.

No other author ever tried so hard -- or succeeded so admirably -- in writing about Cold War spies as human being, as opposed to Automaton (Tom Clancy), UberMan (Ian Fleming) or Captain Angst (John Le Carre). Len Deighton's Bernard Samson actually seems to be a person, juggling the normal burdens of family life with a surreal job situation. It's not great art, or even a great spy novel, but it is superb melodrama.The fourth of 10 books (nine if you discount Winter), Spy Hook is the high-point of this tautly-written series. The usual characters -- Bernard, Frank Harrington, Tante Lisl, Werner Volkmann, et. al. -- make their appearance with as much charm and skill as Deighton has ever mustered. The espionage is gripping without being overbearing and the characterization more deft and detailed than ever.To the reader of Game, Set, Match, Spy Hook won't be a revolutionary experience, but it will remind you of how compelling the concept is and how skillful the execution are. It's like returning to an old friend, only he's better than even you remembered.For new readers -- you will never want to leave.And if you think Tom Clancy is great, you will hate this series.
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