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« #10 - Fits Like A Rubber Dress, by Roxane Ward | Main | #12 - Spook Country, by William Gibson » #11 - Dark Voyage, by Alan Furst
Furst's prose reminds me of Ian Fleming's, in that it's simple, direct, and focuses very much on creating a convincing physical world. In this sort of book its very important that events seem, if not probable, then at least plausible. It's the great strength of Fleming's Bond books, and it's the great strength of Dark Voyage. In terms of the plot, one of the ways Furst maintains this sense of plausibility, is to keep his characters, and the reader, in the dark. They often do not know the purpose or nature of their cargo, so they must travel into hostile waters in perhaps the most dangerous years of the last century. The sense of tension in this book is amazing, and though nothing really happens for pages at a time, those pages are still exciting and the few moments of real violence are even more significant and harrowing as a result. I won't reveal how the novel ends, but it is abruptly and appropriately, and well before the end of the war, just a day or so after the German invasion of Russia. Nothing lasts forever in the world Furst creates (or re-creates); people and things are used up well before the end of the conflict. Next up is William Gibson's Spook Country. Posted by August on 02.02.08 at 8:03 PM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
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