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Cargando... The Prime Minister's Secret Agent : a Maggie Hope mystery (edición 2014)por Susan Elia MacNeal
Información de la obraThe Prime Minister's Secret Agent por Susan Elia MacNeal
Books Read in 2014 (1,765) Cargando...
InscrÃbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. This started a little slower than the first few, and I wasn't feeling too sure about it for awhile. About half way through, I got back on a roll with it though. ( ) The Prime Minister's Secret Agent is the 4th in a series of books. It does stand alone but on wobbly feet. Clearly, the books of the series which preceded it would have made this one more lucid--the references to them permeated this one--and this book itself seemed only to be a gateway to the next book of the series. The primary characters of the series served only minor roles in this particular volume. The central character, Maggie Hope, serves as a secret agent to England during WW II; her mother was a spy-master for the Nazis and is in a British prison facing execution. While this bit of plotting goes on, it is clearly more important to the next volume in the series than it was to this one. In fact, a great portion of this book focuses on the intrigue that surrounded decoding messages in both the UK and the US just before the attack on Pearl Harbor. This intrigue traces some actual historical events and what we have come to understand happened in the background leading up to the attack of December 7. It is fascinating history and has nothing to do with the Maggie Hope character. Books in a series can be very interesting when they are able to stand alone yet still contribute to the series and I occasionally do follow a series of that type. In this case, this book did not interest me enough to even tempt me to read others in the series. When your protagonist is a badass spy who manages to make her way through high society Berlin during the war and brings back one of the most notorious German spies, you tend to expect so much more from her next adventure. And that’s why this book failed the expectations game, at least for me. Maggie has returned to Scotland as an SOE instructor and is seemingly suffering from PTSD after having killed a man in self-defense. She is hard on her trainees but it’s understandable because she just wants them to be tougher. When she travels to Edinburgh to watch Susan’s play, she finds that two women are killed and Susan is critical. Her investigation into this and the catching of the culprit takes just a few chapters and it was so quick, I thought how was this even possible. Wasn’t this the plot of the book, at least according to the blurb. Most of the remaining book deals with the circumstances preceding the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. There was also another plot line of Clara Hess imprisoned in the Tower of London, her regression and some insight into her past. I read these books because I like Maggie. That’s also the reason I was disappointed here – there was so much less of her. The murders were hardly a mystery and I felt they were not up to Maggie’s standards. The mystery should at least be complicated enough for her to deploy her skills. The plot dealing with the Pearl Harbor attack is fiction of course, but it did make for an interesting perspective of how the imminent attack was planned and the intelligence failures that prevented from anticipating it. I was a bit confused about the whole Clara story and it didn’t make me feel any sympathetic towards her. On the whole, this book wasn’t bad, just not enough. Maggie is back in England after her escape from Berlin, via Switzerland, trying to escape the depression that has grabbed her due to the people killed during her Berlin mission and her breakup with John Stirling who was rescued from Berlin. She goes to the coast of Scotland to become a trainer in one of SOE's training camps. While there she adopts a cat, Mr. K, and investigates and solves the murder of a ballerina of the Satler-Wells Ballet performing in Edinburgh due to anthrax. Sarah Sanderson becomes collateral damage and almost dies. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
Pertenece a las seriesMaggie Hope (4) Contenido en
Fiction.
Mystery.
Thriller.
Historical Fiction.
HTML:NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • For fans of Jacqueline Winspear, Charles Todd, and Anne Perry comes a gripping mystery featuring intrepid spy and code breaker Maggie Hope. This time, the fallout of a deadly plot comes straight to her own front door. World War II rages on across Europe, but Maggie Hope has finally found a moment of rest on the pastoral coast of western Scotland. Home from an undercover mission in Berlin, she settles down to teach at her old spy training camp, and to heal from scars on both her body and heart. Yet instead of enjoying the quieter pace of life, Maggie is quickly drawn into another web of danger and intrigue. When three ballerinas fall strangely ill in Glasgow—including one of Maggie’s dearest friends—Maggie partners with MI-5 to uncover the truth behind their unusual symptoms. What she finds points to a series of poisonings that may expose shocking government secrets and put countless British lives at stake. But it’s the fight brewing in the Pacific that will forever change the course of the war—and indelibly shape Maggie’s fate. Praise for The Prime Minister’s Secret Agent “[A] stellar series . . . [Susan Elia] MacNeal has written an impeccably researched, wonderfully engaging story.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune “A treat for WWII buffs and mystery lovers alike.”—Booklist “[MacNeal] seamlessly mixes fact and fiction.”—Publishers Weekly “Splendid . . . riveting . . . The research is complete and fascinating. . . . The scenes are so detailed that readers will feel as if they are next to the characters and listening to them speaking.”—RT Book Reviews (Top Pick) “Fans of Jacqueline Winspear and Charles Todd will feast on this riveting series chronicling Britain’s own ‘Greatest Generation.’ MacNeal’s research and gift for dialogue shine through on every page, transporting the reader to Churchill’s inner circle. The Prime Minister’s Secret Agent is both top-drawer historical fiction and mystery in its finest hour.”—Julia Spencer-Fleming, New York Times bestselling author of Through the Evil Days Praise for Susan Elia MacNeal’s Maggie Hope mysteries “You’ll be [Maggie Hope’s] loyal subject, ready to follow her wherever she goes.”—O: The Oprah Magazine “A heart-pounding novel peopled with fully drawn real and fictional characters . . . provides the thrills that readers have come to expect from MacNeal.”—Richmond Times-Dispatch, on His Majesty’s Hope “With false starts, double agents, and red herrings . . . MacNeal provides a vivid view of life both above and below stairs at Windsor Castle.”—Publishers Weekly, on Princess Elizabeth’s Spy. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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