
 
 Steve Brewer,  author of "Cutthroat" recommends:
 The Tango Briefing by Adam Hall (1973)
 I chose this novel about the British spy Quiller because it's the latest  one I've tracked down, but I really recommend all 19 in this terrific series by  the late Adam Hall (pseudonym for Elleston Trevor). The series began in 1965  with "The Quiller Memorandum," which won the best novel Edgar, and ended with  "Quiller Balalaika" in 1996, the year after Hall's death.
 IMHO, Quiller beats James Bond hands down -- much less sexism and  silliness, but brilliant characterization and gee-whiz spycraft -- and his  stories are more action-packed than the splendid spy novels of  LeCarre. Hall was a master of pacing, often ending chapters with  cliffhangers and using the equivalent of movie "jump cuts" to go back  and forth on the timeline.
 Quiller works for The Bureau, a spy organization so secret that the British  government doesn't admit it exists. He's a "shadow executive," one of only a  handful who's trained to kill, infiltrate, withstand torture, so forth. No fancy  gizmos or jetpacks for Quiller; he rarely even carries a gun. He gets by on his  wits and his toughness, in particular his ability to turn off the demands of his  battered body and still focus on the mission at hand. Quiller's a snarky  character, in constant conflict with the field executives who run his operations  from a (usually) safe distance.
 In "The Tango Briefing," Quiller is sent to North Africa to find an  airplane that has crashed in the sands of the Sahara. The plane carries a  top-secret cargo, and it's quickly apparent that several governments are hunting  it. Most Quiller novels are largely urban, but Quiller spends a lot of time  alone in this one, stranded in the blazing desert, watched only by vultures  who are waiting for him to stop moving. You'll want to keep a lot of water handy  when you read it.
Patti Abbott recommends:
October Light by John Gardner
John Gardner died in a motorcycle accident at the age of 49 in 1982. It is hard to overstate his place at that time in American fiction. His was a loud voice, critical about what he decided was going wrong with the novel, willing to verbally assault his peers. He wrote two fine books on writing, a number of scholarly pieces and six novels before his death. October Light, one of his best works for me, is the story of two elderly siblings in a state of warfare. Sally is forced to live with James when her money runs out. He takes her in but insists on dominating her. He locks her in her bedroom and here she finds a book Smugglers of Lost Soul’s Rock, (a story of marijuana smugglers inCalifornia 
Gardner seems largely forgotten thirty-five years later. Maybe his enemies outnumbered his friends. But October Light along with Nickel Mountain are fine reads.
Here are some other suggestions.
http://crimesceneni.blogspot.com
http://joeboland.blogspot.com
http://geraldso.blogspot.com
http://chrisfholm.blogspot.com/
 Patti Abbott recommends:
October Light by John Gardner
John Gardner died in a motorcycle accident at the age of 49 in 1982. It is hard to overstate his place at that time in American fiction. His was a loud voice, critical about what he decided was going wrong with the novel, willing to verbally assault his peers. He wrote two fine books on writing, a number of scholarly pieces and six novels before his death. October Light, one of his best works for me, is the story of two elderly siblings in a state of warfare. Sally is forced to live with James when her money runs out. He takes her in but insists on dominating her. He locks her in her bedroom and here she finds a book Smugglers of Lost Soul’s Rock, (a story of marijuana smugglers in
Gardner seems largely forgotten thirty-five years later. Maybe his enemies outnumbered his friends. But October Light along with Nickel Mountain are fine reads.
Here are some other suggestions.
http://crimesceneni.blogspot.com
http://joeboland.blogspot.com
http://geraldso.blogspot.com
http://chrisfholm.blogspot.com/
http://knitstoryy.blogspot.com
http://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=647
http://jeriwesterson.typepad.com/
http://jamesreasoner.blogspot.com
http://centralcrimezone.blogspot.com
http://billcrider.blogspot.com
http://therapsheet.blogspot.com
http://www.vincekeenan.com
http://rochellejewelshapiro.blogspot.com
http://womenofmystery.net
http://riordansdesk.blogspot.com/2008/06/forgotten-book.html
      
http://mysteryfile.com/blog/?p=647
http://jeriwesterson.typepad.com/
http://jamesreasoner.blogspot.com
http://centralcrimezone.blogspot.com
http://billcrider.blogspot.com
http://therapsheet.blogspot.com
http://www.vincekeenan.com
http://rochellejewelshapiro.blogspot.com
http://womenofmystery.net
http://riordansdesk.blogspot.com/2008/06/forgotten-book.html
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

4 comments:
I love the Quiller books by Adam Hall. I've read almost all of them, and even a couple of the books Hall wrote under his real name, Ellison Trevor.
I read the first one and that's about it. Have to catch up.
Hi Patti
Just to let you know, after missing a week, I'm back on track. My latest forgotten book is Father's Music.
Cheers
gb
I have this book and have not read it yet. It's interesting that John Gardner seems to be better remembered for his writings on fiction (which I have read) than he does the novels he wrote (which I haven't). Thanks for recommending this one (I've got his others too, but have never been sure which one to start with).
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