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Hardcover The Wall Book

ISBN: 1573221228

ISBN13: 9781573221221

The Wall

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good*

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Book Overview

When was the last time you read a thriller with half a dozen major characters, all of whom you could believe in? John Marks pulls off this amazing trick in his first novel--and also manages to capture... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Racist?

No, The Wall isn't racist, a Hollywood establishment that hasn't seen fit to greenlight a movie based on this amazing thriller centered on a black hero is. Denzel, Will Smith, don't you pay guys to find properties like this for you! If you love Tom Clancy or those other frequent flyer authors, move on. What John Marks has accomplished in this epic, globe-trotting tour-de-force is a combination of J R R Tolkien and Martin Cruz Smith that no one else could have dreamt up. Shoot outs with Commies in the Mountains of Mordor, that's what this book has, and if some amateur reviewers didn't get it, thank god the professionals at Publishers Weekly did. I only hope this guy writes another novel before the tiresome twits get him down.

Excellent piece of historical fiction

I am not a huge fan of spy novels, but this book kept me riveted from the beginning. At times the book did seem a bit like Forrest Gump, in that the characters just happened to end up at ground zero of all the most chaotic events surrounding the Wall's fall. However, to successfully capture the feel and madness of the time, Marks must do this. The book is excellent and I highly recommend it to anyone interested in Cold War history.

Vivid style and color. Depicits the confusion of 1989.

Brings the descriptive color of James Lee Burke to the days of the wall's collapse and a complex understanding of the conflict, confusion and disillusion in the surround. Having been in Berlin, Budapest and Prague in those months, I commend his insight. Extraordinary descriptive language and use of metaphor. Similar qualities to the superlative "Bombay Ice."

The first post-Cold War thriller

This is the best new novel I've read this year. In a stunning display of bad timing, American intelligence officer, and Communist spy, Stuart Glemnick defects to the east on the same day that the Berlin Wall comes down. Comparisons to the thrillers of Le Carre, Deighton, and Graham Greene are apt, but only up to a point. As Stuart's brother Douglas and Stuart's German lover Uta chase Stuart from one collapsing Communist dicatorship to another, the novel is as much madcap picaresque as it is a thrilling manhunt. Brother Douglas is an exterminator from Dallas, and he is mistaken early on by a crazed CIA agent for a master terrorist named Jiri Klek. The result is a series of hilarious set pieces, as Douglas simultaneously looks for his brother, dodges assassination attempts, and cures hotels all the way across Central Europe of their silverfish infestations. Yes, there's a good deal of Le Carre here, but also a good deal of Pynchon and Delillo, with not a little of the satirical spirit of Candide thrown in. This is a wholly original and shamelessly entertaining book, the first real post-Cold War novel. I can't wait to read the author's next one.

Brilliant Plotting

On November 9, 1989, in a shocking turn of events, Stuart Glennick, an American spy, defects to the East. Accompanying Stuart on his flight to the Communists is his German girl friend, Uta Silk. Three hours later, the wall comes tumbling down. Uta changes her mind and returns to the West. Meanwhile, a fellow spy, Stuart's best friend Nester Cates has been sent in to bring Stuart back at all costs. At the same time that Stuart flees the West, his brother Douglas is in Berlin looking for solace after losing his job and wife. Instead of finding inner peace and harmony, Douglas is mistaken for a terrorist and is in danger from both sides. Still, everything returns to Stuart and how his defection is affecting everyone in his circle. THE WALL is great historical fiction that brings to life the most dynamic series of events that culminate with the fall of the Iron Curtain. Stuart is a great character, whose motives are clearly shown by author John Marks. ! The impact of his defection on his friends, lover, and sibling is also distinctly spelled out so that readers can understand their deepest feelings. Though there are moments when the novel seems a bit stretched (for instance, the resemblance between Douglas and the terrorist), the dramatization of the fall of the wall and the rest of the East is a brilliant thriller that clarifies what really happened in an exciting way.Harriet Klausner
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