Blood of Victory by Alan Furst Paperback Book

Details

Rent Blood of Victory

Author: Alan Furst

Format: Paperback

Publisher: Random House Inc

Published: May 2003

Genre: Fiction - General

Retail Price: $17.00

Pages: 246

Synopsis

I.A. Serebin, an emigre writer who heads the International Russian Union and edits its literary magazine, is no stranger to war: 'Two gangsters, one neighborhood, they fight,' he comments at a dinner party on a yacht in the Istanbul harbor in the autumn of 1940. Istanbul, to which Serebin has come to say good-bye to a dying friend, is a haven for spies, arms dealers, diplomats, and intrigue. Like most of the author's protagonists, Serebin is a romantic, a reluctant hero who tries to believe that war will not really change anything: 'Hold fast to life as it should be, the daily ritual, work, love, and then it will be' is his credo. After Paris falls to the Germans, he realizes that is impossible. When a French diplomat's wife, whom he met and bedded on the freighter that brought him to Turkey, puts him in touch with a Hungarian spy working with the British Secret Service, Serebin allows himself to be recruited for a mission to disrupt the flow of oil from Romania's Ploesti fields to German factories--something that has been tried by the British before, without success. Alan Furst, a master stylist whose novels are peopled with characters who remain in the reader's mind long after the last page is turned, evokes Istanbul's smoky, spicy, shadowy atmosphere with the same authenticity he brings to the settings of all his thrillers, most notably Paris. No one is better at describing both place and players in the period just before and during World War II; widely hailed as the successor to Eric Ambler and Graham Greene, Furst proves in his gripping, compulsively readable seventh novel what a contender he is for that title. --Jane Adams

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