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Sto caricando le informazioni... Moscow Rules (Gabriel Allon) (originale 2008; edizione 2009)di Daniel Silva (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaLe regole di Mosca di Daniel Silva (2008)
Books Read in 2016 (352) Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. I enjoyed this book a lot, which is normal for me and the Gabriel Allon series. I think that I may be getting tired of the series, though. It's somewhat of a similar formula for each one, where everything goes along well, then something goes wrong, Gabriel gets beat up or almost dies, but you always know he won't because there's more to the series. Still, I enjoy the humor and excitement, so I'll keep reading them. Gabriel is on his honeymoon with Chiara in a remote part of Italy and restoring a painting for the Vatican when he is summoned by Ari Shammron to meet with a Russian journalist who wants to impart some vital information about a threat to himself, Israel, and the West. Two Russian journalist are killed trying to impart some vital information to Gabriel. Ivan Karkov is a wealthy Russian arms dealer selling and delivering arms to sub-Saharan Africa nations. One nation decides to resell arms to al-Qaeda and Gabriel sets out to stop Ivan and atone for the deaths of the journalists. Meh. This is an OK spy story. I wish books would indicate when the protagonist is a recurring character. There were many "call backs" to previous stories so sometimes I felt a bit lost, but that didn't really deter from the story. Here, Israeli spy Gabriel Allon must determine what arms have been sold by Russian oligarch Ivan Kharkov and to whom. The Moscow setting is well done as is the primary characters. The end happened in the blink of an eye and somewhat unsatisfactorily. After journalist Aleksandr Viktorovich Lubin is assassinated by an agent of the siloviki, the former KGB men who now run Russia, Boris Ostrovsky, the editor in chief, of the Moskovsy Gazeta ...one of the country's last investigative weeklies and ...a persistent stone in the shoe of the Kremlin, contacts the Israeli embassy in Rome with a message and a request. "He said he had an important message to pass along regarding a grave threat to the security of the West and to the State of Israel," and he requsted to give that information only to Gabriel Allon. Before he can give the message to Allon, he is poisoned by the siloviki, and dies in Allon's arms in an enclave of St. Peter's Basilica, St. Peter's Square. Ari Shamron knows that Ostrovsky's information concerns an existenial threat to Israel and pulls Gabriel out of his honeymoon and away from his latest art restoration. Allon travels to Moscow to meet with the new acting editor in chief, of the Moskovsy Gazeta, Olga Sukhova. While there he follows Moscow Rules, "Assume every room is bugged and every telephone call monitored. Assume every person you encounter is under opposition control. And don't look back. You are never completely alone." Although he follows the rules, Gabriel ends up being questioned and beaten in the notorious Lubyanka. He has, however, discovered that the source of Ostrovsky's information is the wife of the ruthless Russian oligarch and gun-runner, Ivan Borisovich Kharkov, Elena. Adrian Carter's NSA intercepts reveal that Elena covets art by Mary Cassatts and agrees to send Sarah Bancroft, now a CIA officer, to work with Allon. The operation becomes one of the most complex and difficult of Allon's career.
In the hands of a less skilled author, Gabriel's unexpected detours would simply provide page-turning dramatic tension, a fine addition to any spy novel. But under Silva, one of fiction's best espionage authors, those actions are more than just a simple plot device. Daniel Silva’s espionage thrillers have plenty of high-concept plot twists such as terrorists, bombings, national security and the world in chaos. But one of the real reasons that Silva’s novels have found a resonance with readers – and a secure place on best-sellers lists – is the author’s ability to put a human face on these big-picture themes. Silva employs realpolitik in his this novel, bringing his insight into Russia’s current state as an underlying theme to the thrills of his plot, which includes swaying the wife of a Russian super-thug to turn on him. It is this aura of real-world menace that gives “Moscow Rules” its true flavor of suspense; that and Silva’s taut, page-turning style and quick ability to create solid characters with few words. OK, it sounds like your run-of-the-mill thriller. But Silva packs his pages with detailed tradecraft — and with local color that lives and breathes of such settings as the French Riviera, London, Paris and (of course, given the title) Moscow. Then there's the character of Allon, an interesting man who has stayed interesting through a whole string of thrillers...Put "Moscow Rules" atop your summer beach book list. Silva’s protagonist is the colorful, intriguing center of this spy series. A reluctant hero who has already lost his first wife and child to save the world once, he fears he could be risking his art, his life–everything, all over again. Expertly written and plotted, with lots of suspense and a charming hero, this mystery entertains. Appartiene alle SerieGabriel Allon (8) È contenuto inÈ riassunto inPremi e riconoscimentiMenzioni
The death of a journalist leads Gabriel Allon to Russia, where he finds that, in terms of spycraft, even he has something to learn. He's playing by Moscow rules now. Ivan Kharkov, a former KGB colonel who built a global investment empire on the rubble of the Soviet Union, is an arms dealer and he is about to deliver Russia's most sophisticated weapons to al- Qaeda. Unless Allon can learn the time and place of the delivery, the world will see the deadliest terror attacks since 9/11and the clock is ticking fast. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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Dialog is more natural, action not too over the top.
I also really like the small subtle surprises that occur as the series progresses. ( )