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Audiobook10 hours
Games Traitors Play
Written by Jon Stock
Narrated by Paul Panting
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
Western intelligence is in meltdown trying to locate Salim Dhar, the world's most wanted terrorist. But only renegade MI6 officer Daniel Marchant knows how to find him. Everywhere Marchant moves, from Marrakech to Sardinia, he is shadowed by the exotic CIA agent Lakshmi Meena. As Britain braces itself for a series of terrifying terrorist attacks, Marchant is forced to confront dark personal truths about loyalty and love.
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Author
Jon Stock
Jon Stock is currently Weekend editor of the Daily Telegraph. He is the author of two novels, ‘The Riot Act’ and the ‘Cardamom Club’, and is also a columnist with The Week magazine in India. He lives in Wiltshire with his wife and three young children.
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Reviews for Games Traitors Play
Rating: 3.264705882352941 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
17 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Phew! This is a good one.
I would suggest (again) that John le Carré defined the British spy novel - and even the names and terms of the (real) world of espionage in many people's understanding of such things. More than James Bond - at least until recently. But, le Carré's classics, whilst still being classics, are a bit old-school, aren't they? He's good, but all a bit last century? But because the world le Carré created is quite probably the world that many readers think actually exists, it must be difficult to try to move into 'his territory' and write a 21st Century spy novel. Difficult to say things are/were different and sound convincing.
Unless, it seems, you're Jon Stock. His 'Games Traitors Play' is the first of his novels I have read - but it will absolutely not be the last.
'Games Traitors Play' plunges immediately headlong into a thoroughly believable and satisfyingly confusing, switch-back story of cross-, double-cross - and I wouldn't be at all surprised if I didn't miss a triple cross somewhere along the line. Talk about not being able to put it down, I couldn't. Didn't dare. It was glued to my hands. Didn't dare feel like I'd missed something, misinterpreted someone somewhere double crossing someone somewhere else. You can't take your eyes off this one for a moment. I love a book where you really need to pay attention.
So, he seems to have effortlessly and immediately created a believable - background history and all - spy world. Gone of course, is the Cold War. But the tensions and aftershocks are still being felt. International terrorism is the 'new Russia', of course, but the old Russia is still alive and kicking. And part of the fall-out from the Cold War, is new tension based on old rivalries, between the UK and US spy and counter-spy cultures. No matter how satisfying it is, as a British reader, to see the Yank intelligence people get their comeuppance from time to time, you do have to remind yourself sometimes that we're supposed to be on the same side here! And who is on the other side? Who knows! A thoroughly confusing, shifting, shapeless world of terrorists cells, individuals and Jihadists, each using each other and their allegiances to each other and no one, to create an unidentifiable moving target for today's secret agents to try and aim at. In the good old days, you knew that everyone on this side of the Iron Curtain was on your side, everyone on the other side, wasn't, didn't you? Everyone on both sides, knew which rules to play by; they'd all been to the same English Public Schools after all! That's all changed. I don't envy today's spies, that's for sure.
The book rushes round the espionage world at a satisfyingly controlled breakneck pace, taking in amongst other places, Morocco and the Atlas Mountains, Sardinia and deepest, darkest Russia. But it is mainly centred on Britain, British spies now and then and London and MI6's headquarters. No longer of course 'The Circus', but the much more modern 'Legoland' (if you've seen the latest James Bond 'Skyfall', you'll know why). Also and a first in my reading experience, the genteel town of Cheltenham and it's GCHQ 'doughnut' get some well-deserved recognition.
In the end, 'Games Traitors Play' is a book all about relationships. Uneasy, troubled, but necessary relationships. Between MI5 and MI6, between the UK and the US and especially their respective ways of doing things. Between family, father and son, brothers and of course, the past and the present, between old-school and new-school spying.
As i said, I couldn't put it down. Even when I'd finished. Kept hoping there was more. There are more, so Amazon will be getting an order as soon as my pocket money arrives in the new year.
"Little does she know that I know that she knows that I know she's two-timing me...."
Remember that song?
Suppose you need to be of a certain age. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The espionage novel updated to reflect today's never-ending state of alert and anxiety. The basic premise is a bit far-fetched: that a very capable MI-6 agent and a leading Islamic terrorist are half-brothers. The Americans, led by a vulgar, sadistic neo-con believes that the British agent is a traitor due to his family ties--so they have him waterboarded at a black CIA site. Later, the same CIA zealot condemns Daniel (the Brit) to torture by the Moroccan secret police; this tale makes the Americans look as evil and psychopathic as the KGB under Brezhnev. While everyone else plays with finesse--double-dealing and manipulation are rampant--the Americans rely on brute force, and are bumblers to boot. Daniel has been betrayed by his former lover, so he is paranoid personally and professionally. This is a book that does not serve as a recruiting poster for spies. They can trust no one, are completely isolated, and kill and maim at will. But the family element goes deeper, and Stock succeeds in providing the final surprise on the last page, a nifty bit of plotting and a fitting final betrayal.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5An interesting idea, though I found the main protagonist, roving MI6 agent Daniel Marchant, extremely irritating and rather wished that the CIA would succeed in putting him out of everyone's misery quite early on in the book!