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Portrait of a Spy door Daniel Silva
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Portrait Of A Spy (editie 2012)

door Daniel Silva

LedenBesprekingenPopulariteitGemiddelde beoordelingAanhalingen
4842219,458 (3.9)37
Lid:torontoc
Titel:Portrait Of A Spy
Auteurs:Daniel Silva
Info:Harper (2012), Edition: Reprint, Mass Market Paperback, 528 pages
Verzamelingen:Mijn bibliotheek
Beoordeling:****
Trefwoorden:american fiction, spies, mystery, given to susan

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Portrait of a Spy door Daniel Silva

Onlangs toegevoegd doorbesloten bibliotheek, stevenz96, Markjp917, lynnwc, KathleenMorna, beemi, reecejones, DelWebbCHS, cushlareads, mcvillelibrary

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Engels (21)  Deens (1)  Alle talen (22)
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Gabriel Allon has "retired" to Cornwall to spend leisurely days with his wife Chiara. He awaits his next restoration project and is delighted to learn that Julian Isherwood has an undiscovered Titian needing work. Gabriel and Chiara travel to London to negotiate the work but a terrorist gets in the way. Terrorists have launched attacks in Paris and Copenhagen. The eagle eyes of Allon spot a human bomb in crowded Covent Garden. He has mentally calculated the timing of the next explosion and his instincts are triggered as he steps in to try to stop the detonation. And so the 2011 installment of the Allon series begins.

Silva, once again, brings the art restorer/ Israeli operative out of retirement. To say that this is a coincidental is a given, but Silva gets a pass to set up one of the most intricate books in the series. Gabriel cannot say no to the coalition of terrorist fighters being assembled by the the United States and joins them in Washington. All the players whom we have come to know are there: Eli Lavon, street surveillance expert; Uzi Navot, Israel's chief of secret intelligence; Ari Shamron, esteemed head of Massad and Adrian Carter, director of the CIA's National Clandestine Service. A most ingenious plan is formulated that involves recruiting Nadia al-Bakari, daughter of Zizi al-Bakari who financed mass murder and was killed by Allon in The Secret Servant. Could the team enlist her aid to bring down the group who has threatened to continue the work of Al-Qaeda and Bin Laden. (n.b During the writing of this book the death of Bin Laden happened. Silva incorporates it into the plot without skipping a beat.)

The action moves from London to New York, Washington, Paris, the opulent city of Dubai, and the Saudi desert. Setting is a real strength of any Silva book. He has done his research and through his descriptions he plops the reader down into those settings. Portrait of a Spy is no exception. Anyone who has been to London feels right at home walking with Gabriel and Chiara through Covent Garden even if it is on the heels of a human bomb.

Portrait of a Spy is thrilling and a page turner. Silva is a master of that. There is no way the reader can erase the final scenes from the mind's gallery. But Silva is also a political and social commentator. He does not easy hide in this book his disdain for the Saudi treatment of women nor the country's leadership in it's part in the terrorists' world. His mastery of the subject matter almost make for prophetic reading and a real wake-up call to those who have been lulled into complacency. His books are not to be missed and I dread the day that Gabriel Allon goes into retirement for real. ( )
  cashbridge | Feb 3, 2013 |
While this is another Gabriel Allon novel, it seemed to illustrate a few real issues/peeves of the author: treatment (bad) of women in the islamic world, dedication of the radical jihad adherents against western morals and views and spy trade craft...to name a few. I couldn't help drawing those conclusions even though the story was fictitious. Well researched, I'd say. ( )
  buffalogr | Jan 4, 2013 |
a good spy novel; I'm now interested in the whole series ( )
  rosies | Aug 21, 2012 |
this was a great book. i love the whole spy/art restorer angle. i've read the rest in this series as well and can't wait for the next. if you like the spy game with not going to overboard this is a good book to read. Another masterful effort in the world of Gabriel Allon who is once again drawn into the Israeli spy net when he witnesses a terror attack in London. ( )
  krushkelsey | Aug 8, 2012 |
One of my favorites in the Gabriel Allon series in quite a few books. Read quickly, although I fear the book was going to land in the Hudson River if I didn't like the way it ended. Once again, I was left fearing for Shamron's life - and to some extent Chiara's. I know that Gabriel will survive as long as Silva wishes to keep writing. Gabriel seems to be making peace with the possible passing of the Old Man - Shamron would never survive Gabriel's death.

The parallels with the real war on terror are eeie - but Silva keeps the narrative strong enough to enjoy the story, not the news. I fear for Allon with Nadia's death on his hands - but it seems to make him stronger. The Prince of Fire indeed and I liked that tie back to an earlier title. Reading this on the heals of Rembrandt made some of it redundant... I never realized how Silva reuses the exact same verbiage to describe the Office, but I guess most people read the books a year apart - not days apart.

If he really does head to Rome as the end seems I will miss the villagers in Cornwall who are so clearly enthralled with Gabriel and Chiara. Their love for him makes him seem all the more real.
Because it had been a while since I read the book with Sarah and Zizi I forgot all about Nadia - I was in the world of Kharkov. I like how Nadia was written - and I like that she was able to learn Gabriel's truth before she passed. Was she really ill though? I didn't remember that mention - I like the underlying tension with Chiara and Nadia, although I loved knowing Gabriel was loyal - there was no worry. I miss his visits to his wife though and can't recall if Leah has passed.

Interesting to see how it wrapped - and who the person was who sold out Gabriel & Nadia, but I felt it too contrived. While their death ensured Gabriel's survival, I'd love to have known how / why Nadia's team turned on her. Or why Malik let her survive so long. His ultimate undoing? The pace of this book was perfect to read in spurts - and to grow attached.

A wonderful lines - but two I'm sure will never come true:
"The illustrious career of Gabriel Allon was finally over. He was no longer Israel's avenging angel. He was an art restorer employed by Isherwood Fine Arts, and England was his home."

"'I had no choice but to set him free,' Shamron said after his fabled encounter with Gabriel atop the cliffs of Cornwall. 'This time it's for good'"

The latter may be, however, when/if the Old Man finally passes. But I think he's Silva's muse as much as Gabriel is so maybe he is eternal. I like the evolving father/son relationship that's more obvious than implied.

My random thought.. what language to Gabriel and Chiara use with one another? Shamron doesn't understand Italian - Hebrew while he was there? Chiara must speak from her Office work. They are clearly family as when Gabriel was first dispatched to the US, Gabriel asked Uzi to take Chiara back to Israel... to help Gilah. ( )
  skinglist | Aug 3, 2012 |
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For my wonderful children, Nicholas and Lily, whom I love and admire more than they will ever know. And, as always, for my wife, Jamie, who makes everything possible.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0062072188, Hardcover)


Amazon Exclusive: Daniel Silva on Writing Portrait of a Spy with a Pencil

While on book tour, I’ve been surprised to find that readers are fascinated by how writers actually write. Most readers hold in their mind an idealized image of the novelist at work—a figure in a trendy urban coffeehouse, a solitary figure walking along an empty beach. The truth, however, is seldom so romantic.

Before going any further, let us stipulate that, much like the hero of my novels, the art restorer and spy Gabriel Allon, I am something of a creature of habit. I work seven days a week, from early in the morning until six thirty in the evening, when I stop to watch the evening news. My work clothing never varies: gray sweatpants by Russell Athletic, a long-sleeve T-shirt by L.L. Bean, fleece Acorn moccasins, and discount cotton socks from Marks & Spencer in England. Occasionally, visitors to our house will catch a glimpse of this outfit, but, for the most part, my wife and children tend to shield me from public view. As a rule, I don’t answer the telephone—unless it is a family emergency of some sort—and I don’t read e-mail. I nibble rather than eat. Portrait of a Spy, like all the Gabriel Allon novels, was fueled largely by McVitie’s digestive biscuits.

I have a computer, of course, but I really do most of my actual writing in longhand, on yellow legal pads. I prefer to work while lying on the floor rather than at my desk. This annoys my wife because she took a great deal of time and effort to have a desk custom made to fit my office. When I showed her a photograph of Muriel Spark, one of her literary heroes, writing in longhand stretched across a floor, she was only partially mollified. Sometimes we talk about living somewhere other than Georgetown. Secretly, the very idea terrifies me. After writing 14 books in the same room of the same house, I am afraid I have lost the ability to work anywhere else.

As for my writing instrument of choice, it is unquestionably the pencil. There is something about the sound it makes scratching across the page that, for me, is the essence of composition. The pencil is the antithesis of all things cyber and e, a means of returning, however briefly, to a world that is unconnected and unwired. A pad and pencil do not freeze or crash. There are no viruses or error messages. If a thunderstorm knocks out the power, the words will still be there when the lights come on again. And then, there is the satisfying natural rhythm of the work itself—the turning of the completed page, the sharpening of the dulled point, the fortnightly disposal of the fluffy wooden shavings.

Lately, I have been hoarding pencils. I’m not sure precisely when it began; I suspect it had something to do with the death of the typewriter. An irrational fear gripped me, a fear that pencils were next. If the typewriter could go extinct, how could the lowly, environmentally hostile pencil possibly hope to survive in the brave new world? I now order my favorite brand—the Paper Mate Mirado Black Warrior No. 2—by the case. I am reasonably confident I now have enough pencils on hand to see me through the next several novels—though, if I happen to misplace a pencil, I will search the house thoroughly before removing a new one from its special drawer and sharpening it for the first time. To sharpen a virgin pencil is, in a sense, to commit an act of assisted suicide. It saddens me.

I wish it were not so. I wish I could write on a computer while traveling on an airplane or sitting in a strange hotel room, but I cannot. I have become a prisoner of my office. I need my floor, and my Mirado Black Warrior No. 2 pencils, and my McVitie’s digestive biscuits. I hoard them, too. I keep them on a special shelf in the storage room, next to my socks from Marks & Spencer.

Copyright © Daniel Silva 2011. All Rights Reserved.

(opgehaald bij Amazon Thu, 14 Feb 2013 13:32:57 -0500)

(alle 7 beschrijvingen tonen)

After failing to stop a suicide bomber attack in London, master art restorer and assassin Gabriel Allon is summoned by the CIA and is faced with an organization riddled with dissent -- and ill-equipped to deal with the deadly new face of global jihadist terror.… (meer)

(samenvatting van een andere editie)

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