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Paperback The Secret Service Book

ISBN: 0578995166

ISBN13: 9780578995168

The Secret Service

In a quasi-eighteenth century Europe, agents of the secret service use their ability to masquerade as objects to break up a plot against the king and queen. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: New

$19.99
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Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A Classic Novel of the Marvelous

Wendy Walker's "Secret Service" is an instant classic--a novel of the fantastic that hasn't often been equalled. Impossible to truly characterize, "Secret Service" might be described as a delicious mix of Joan Aiken's "Dido" series, Matthew Monk Lewis, and Rikki Ducornet. It is a somtimes hilarious amalgam of Gothic, spy thriller, and 19th Century adventure novel conventions presented through the filter of the Goncourt brothers' Fin-De-Siecle decorative arts sensibility. Sounds interesting? You betcha! Sounds involved? You betcha! Don't let Walker's formidably dense prose and conceptualizations put you off of this wonderful work, though. This sublime novel of the grotto is an incredibly written catalog of the marvelous. The first chapter in particular resonates with a poetic quality that marks it as a landmark work.As a side note, Walker's husband is the very gifted author Tom La Farge ("Crimson Bears," "Zunting")The fact that neither of these authors is better known is an almost criminal condemnation of the US literary scene.

One of the finest novels ever written

(....)despite the amazing number of high-quality pages thathave passed my vision this year, when I turned the last page of TheSecret Service, there was no question: at this point in time, unless I come across something even more stunning, this is without doubt my book of the year. Imagine, if you will, a nineteenth-century tale of intrigue set in the world of Myst, where nothing is what it seems and around every corner another surprising discovery awaits. The year is never given, but the century is, close to the end of the book, and it is set in Europe in the 1800s. The head of the British Secret Service has uncovered a plot by three of the continent's most powerful figures to overthrow the King of England. The plot has been twenty years in the making, and is about to come to a head. As all this is going on, a scientist in the employ of that same Secret Service has stumbled upon a discovery that will change the face of intrigue forever; he has discovered a way for humans to change their shapes. How better to spy on the conspirators than to send them those things they most obsess over? Three Secret Service agents, one of them a new recruit, are chosen as the main agents on the mission. One is sent to the German conspirator, a collector of fine glass and porcelain, as a crystal goblet of unparalleled delicacy; a second to the French conspirator, a gardener by hobby, as a heretofore-undiscovered breed of rose; a third to the Italian conspirator, a collector of sculpture, as a Milanese Thisbe. Of course, as with any decent spy novel, things start to go wrong just as everyone is settling in. It's impossible to describe some of the novel's strongest points without giving away pieces of the plot. Polly, the new recruit and the novel's central character (if there is, truly, a central character here), finds herself on a journey that we're never told the nature of; it could be a spiritual journey, it could be an allegorical journey, it could be some physical trip to an alternate universe. We don't know. We couldn't care less. The end result is the same, and we are stunned by it. Similarly, revealing the slightest point of the plot would bring the whole intricate construction of the first hundred fifty or so pages down. In fact, revealing the shape-changing nature of the agents already takes away from the book, but I can't just say "it's the best damn book I've ever read, go get a copy." You're going to have to hunt high and low for one, I think, unless bookfinder.com happens to have a few lying around. So now you've got an idea of what it's about, kind of. But what is truly amazing about this book is its construction, its writing. It's not only set in the nineteenth century, it sounds as if it were written during the nineteenth century, but with a modern sensibilty. I'm not sure I can describe exactly what I mean, but books written before about WW2 or thereabouts have more of a sense of leisure (for want of a better term) about them. Hawthorne is suppos
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