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Istanbul Express
Istanbul Express
Istanbul Express
Audiobook4 hours

Istanbul Express

Written by T. Davis Bunn

Narrated by Ron Varela

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

()

About this audiobook

With Stalin on the move to build a Russian empire that runs from the Arctic Circle to the Indian Ocean, Jake and Sally Burnes are dispatched to an exotic new location outside the sphere of traditional American interests: Istanbul. With the Eastern Mediterranean in turmoil, Jake is to oversee a massive aid program. But as they travel on the Orient Express, a shocking discovery makes clear that a radically different kind of intervention is required. At the same time, spiritual growth comes from an unexpected new direction. Amidst murky Byzantine alleys, magnificent domes and minarets, they must find a way to thwart the grand designs of Russian power.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 15, 2005
ISBN9781614532200
Istanbul Express

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Reviews for Istanbul Express

Rating: 4.2692307846153845 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

13 ratings2 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    World War II is behind them, but now an ominous Iron Curtain is descending in Europe. American Jake Burnes, Frenchman Pierre Servais, and their two wives travel to Turkey to help set a defense against Communist expansion in Istanbul Express, a novel by author T. Davis Bunn.I've enjoyed the Rendezvous with Destiny series, especially the first novel, Rhineland Inheritance. It was a pleasure to see the four main characters teamed up in this conclusion, and I gained a new favorite, an older character by the name of Phyllis. She brings some refreshing moments to the story, including a fair share of its humor.While I'd say the suspense and tension in this historical series is on the low-key side in general, I imagined the series might still go out with more of a bang, especially considering some of the high moments in the first four books and the intriguing setup at the end of Berlin Encounter.However, in this last story, I found the tension and mood so low-key and the pace so sedate that my interest wandered a few times through it, and I never got deeply engrossed in it. More than past the halfway point, I was still waiting for things to pick up, and the ending doesn't bring the series to a satisfying close so much as the story just seems to choose a place to stop, having nowhere else to go.I also wondered about the number of punctuation errors in the edition I read (Books 4 and 5 combined in a hardback) and places where the recurring lack of conjunctions feels more awkward than stylish, as if the wording wasn't given a final polish.But overall, I got what I was looking for when I decided to read some new-to-me books from the '90s by one of my longtime favorite authors.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    As the Iron Curtain descends across battle-scarred Europe, American foreign policy races from crisis to crisis. With Stalin on the move, there's only one hope -- a strategy of containment to draw a defense against Communist expansion. At this moment in time, Jake and Sally are dispatched to Istanbul to oversee a massive aid program. Amidst murky Byzantine alleys, and magnificent domes and minarets, the couple is thrust into a hotbed of international intrigue the likes of which they'd never imagined.