Afbeelding auteur

Robert Bogardus Parker (1906–1955)

Auteur van Passport to Peril

3 Werken 170 Leden 6 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Werken van Robert Bogardus Parker

Passport to Peril (1951) 160 exemplaren
Ticket to Oblivion (1950) 8 exemplaren
HEADQUARTERS BUDAPEST (1944) 2 exemplaren

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Officiële naam
Parker, Robert Bogardus Jr
Geboortedatum
1906-06-14
Overlijdensdatum
1955-04-29
Graflocatie
Riverside Cemetery, Woodstock, VT
Geslacht
male
Beroepen
war correspondent
Relaties
Parker, Lorraine Wolcott Jackson (spouse)
Parker, Alice Downing (mother)
Parker, Robert Bogardus Sr (father)
Korte biografie
A lifelong newspaper man, Parker reported from behind enemy lines during World War II, bringing home news from Germany, Poland, Russia, Turkey, and Japan. He was also an agent for the OSS—the precursor to the CIA—and had a hand in freeing Jewish prisoners in Europe and carrying out communications activities for the U.S. Back home after the war, Parker worked as United Nations bureau chief for the New York Daily News. He wrote three books decades before his namesake (no relation) began writing the best-selling Spenser novels.

Leden

Besprekingen

An account written by the head of the AP in Eastern Europe, who later worked for the Office of War Information in Turkey. A lot of very good stories about the personalities in the governments of the time -- frankly, many of them are too good to be true. (And one, about the death of Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria, is certainly not true.) I'm not sure how much faith I put in all his extended quotes. It should be noted that Parker later went on to write spy novels, and some of that genre leaks into this account (especially his fascination with blondes.) The last chapter of the book has some speculations as to the post-war settlement of the Balkans, which are quaint, to say the least.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
EricCostello | Apr 25, 2018 |
"Passport to Peril" is a Hard Case crime book by the *original* Robert B. Parker (if you want a laugh, look it up on Amazon and see how many negative reviews it got from people pissed off that it's not the Robert B. Parker who wrote the Spenser books). It was a nifty little spy/espionage novel taking place after WW2. John Stoddard is traveling to Hungary to investigate what happened to his brother, who was last seen parachuting out of a plane in the area. On the train, he meets a beautiful woman named Maria, who is looking for her boss, who was supposed to be on the train. Her boss's name is Marcel Blaye, and Stoddard immediately knows something is wrong, since he's traveling on Blaye's passport that he bought in Geneva, not realizing it's a murdered man's passport. Maria has an envelope that Blaye intrusted to her, an envelope full of names that Russians and Germans and everyone else under the sun seem to be after. It was pretty interesting.… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
bekkil1977 | 4 andere besprekingen | Feb 9, 2018 |
Passport to Peril was one of three spy novels written by Robert Bogadus Parker Jr., the original Robert Parker. He was, as his daughter explains in an afterward, "first and foremost a newspaper man." He was a war correspondent and reported from the front lines throughout World War 2. He also worked extensively with the OSS, the forerunner of the CIA, particularly in Budapest.
This story takes place shortly after the war ended and after Eastern Europe was overrun by the Soviets. The narrator of the story is one of the young innocents with no intention of getting caught up in the spy game. As he explains, "It wasn't until the Orient Express was nearing the Hungarian frontier, about two hours out of Vienna, that I found I was traveling on the passport of a murdered man." Wow. What an opening to the story!

It so happens that Maria Torres sits down in the train car with the narrator, John Stodder, thinking that she is meeting up with her employer, Marcel Blaye. It turns out though that Blaye never made it to the train and Stodder bought a false passport from a contact that had belonged to Blaye only with Stodder's picture now in it. To make matters worse, it turns out that Blaye was selling secrets from German scientists who had survived the war to the Soviets. And, Stoddard has not a clue what those secrets are or why they are important.

It is a well-told story, particularly the beginning as Stoddard tries to figure out what he and Maria have gotten themselves into with the Soviets after them, the Germans trying to re-establish a Fourth Reich, and the American spies are there too. There is plenty of intrigue here and gunfights. It is also remarkable how early this was written and how much spy fiction came after
Most of the action takes place in Soviet-controlled Hungary and Parker does a great job of capturing the life under Soviet domination with

locals afraid to speak their minds and secret police everywhere. Even the cocktail waitresses at the nightclub were fearful to say anything that could be misconstrued. It was not a happy time in Eastern Europe to say the least. Parker points out that for many of the peasants there was not much difference between Soviet and German control.

All in all, it is a fine addition to the Hard Case Crime series.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
DaveWilde | 4 andere besprekingen | Sep 22, 2017 |
A fine pulp spy thriller

If you are in the market for a good old fashioned pulp spy thriller then this is perfect. Written in the 50's by X who had a rather fascinating life himself. We have murders on trains, Nazi's still dreaming of WWII, chases in snowy forests, evil Russians, femme fatales and a beautiful dame in distress. Cold war conspiracies and gunfights what more do you want? In short, hugely engaging story with one of those fantastic hard case crime covers

Recommended.
 
Gemarkeerd
clfisha | 4 andere besprekingen | Oct 14, 2013 |

Misschien vindt je deze ook leuk

Gerelateerde auteurs

Statistieken

Werken
3
Leden
170
Populariteit
#125,474
Waardering
3.0
Besprekingen
6
ISBNs
7

Tabellen & Grafieken