Found Wanting
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
David Rintoul brings a satisfying noirish sensibility to this thriller about a contemporary British foreign service officer who is suddenly caught up in an intrigue involving the end of tsarist Russia and the undying rumor that Nicholas and Alexandra's youngest daughter, Anastasia, somehow survived the family's massacre. It's a well-worn tale, of course, but Goddard manages enough new twists to keep the mystery fresh, and in Rintoul he has an able accomplice. The story propels its hero, Richard Eusden, across Europe, and Rintoul expertly handles all the accents Goddard throws at him--Danish, Finnish, American, Russian--without ever overdoing it or stooping to caricature. M.O. (c) AudioFile 2010, Portland, Maine
January 3, 2011
At the start of Goddard's highly entertaining suspense novel, London civil servant Richard Eusden is contemplating "the predictable day and unsurprising week that lie ahead" one Monday morning outside his office in Whitehall. Then Richard's ex-wife, Gemma, pulls over in her car and insists he get in. Marty Hewitson, Richard's "childhood friend" and Gemma's "other ex-husband," is dying from a brain tumor, and she needs Richard to deliver to Marty an old leather attaché case that belonged to Marty's grandfather, Clem Hewitson. An Isle of Wight police officer who's been dead more than 20 years, Clem was known to exaggerate and sometimes invent adventures that included spies, murderers, and arsonists. But this ordinary errand takes a wild turn, and soon Richard is crisscrossing Europe, dodging assassins trying to protect the satchel that may contain secret documents related to the Romanovs. Richard can't trust anyone, least of all Marty. Goddard (Long Time Coming) imbues his clever plot with hairpin turns and sophisticated humor.
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