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Death Will Have Your Eyes
Unavailable
Death Will Have Your Eyes
Unavailable
Death Will Have Your Eyes
Audiobook4 hours

Death Will Have Your Eyes

Written by James Sallis

Narrated by William Roberts

Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

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About this audiobook

John le Carré meets the Coen brothers in this inspired road novel about secret agents on a mission to find meaning in their lives

David was one of an elite corps of spies trained during the Cold War. But those days are gone and for nine years he has been an ordinary citizen... until a phone call in the middle of the night. The only other known survivor of that elite corps has gone rogue. They need David to stop him. What ensues is an existential cat-and-mouse game played out across the American landscape.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 2, 2014
ISBN9781471274183
Unavailable
Death Will Have Your Eyes
Author

James Sallis

James Sallis has published fourteen novels, multiple collections of short stories, poems and essays, the definitive biography of Chester Himes, three books of musicology, and a translation of Raymond Queneau's novel Saint Glinglin. The film of Drive won Best Director award at Cannes; the six Lew Griffin books are in development. Jim plays guitar, banjo, mandolin, fiddle and Dobro both solo and with the band Three-Legged Dog.

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Reviews for Death Will Have Your Eyes

Rating: 3.076923076923077 out of 5 stars
3/5

13 ratings3 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Bei diesem Buch kann man kaum von herkömmlicher Spannungsliteratur reden, auch wenn das Cover einen darüber aufklärt, dass der Autor deutscher Krimipreisträger ist. Wer oberflächliche Unterhaltung sucht, ist hier falsch aufgehoben.Ex-Agent David wird aus dem Ruhestand zurückgeholt.Er soll seinen ehemaligen Kollegen, Luc Planchat, finden, der wahllos meuchelnd durch Amerika zieht.Er ist "eine Killermaschine. Die beste und ganz sicher die kunstvollste, die je ersonnen wurde." - wie es ein Vorgesetzter ausdrückt.David nimmt das Ganze allerdings eher auf die lockere Schulter. Er begibt sich auf eine Fahrt durch die amerikanische Provinz bei der er Zeit findet in verrauchten Bars Country-Musikern zuzuhören und mit traurigen Kellnerinnen zu flirten.Zwischendurch kommt es immer wieder zu Gewaltszenen, David liefert sich Schlägereien mit Saufbrüdern und wird von Killern verfolgt, die Anschläge auf sein Leben verüben, doch wirklich aus der Ruhe bringen lässt er sich dadurch nicht. Der Autor beschreibt die Geschehnisse eher aus der Distanz, so dass nie ein wirkliches Gefühl der Gefahr aufkommt.Als er am Ende seinem Gegenspieler begegnet, ist die Luft längst raus. Die Handlung ist bereits derartig zerfasert, dass man gar nicht mehr weiß, wer hier hier eigentlich wen und weshalb umbringen will. "Deine Augen hat der Tod" ist ein meditatives, langsames Buch, das seine Story nur als Vorwand nutzt um tiefschürfende Betrachtungen über das Leben, die Liebe, das Altern anzustellen. Das ist stellenweise ganz interessant, aber auch ein wenig prätentiös. Und manchmal gelingt es dem Autor die Dinge sehr schön auf den Punkt zu bringen:"Ironie, würde mancher sagen, ist die Stimme unserer Zeit, einer Zeit, die vielleicht mehr dem Bild und der Form als der Substanz zuneigt."
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    "Everything you know about me, everything you think you know, is false."When you find yourself chanting "I'm so bored" in your head while reading a book you know that that book probably isn't the one for you. I couldn't help but chant that while reading this. I managed to finish this within a day because it was a relatively short book and I realize that if this had been any longer that it would have been the first book I didn't finish in a long time.Death Will Have Your Eyes is being released by Mulholland Books as a part of their Classics series. I picked it up from NetGalley because it was being advertised as 'a novel about spies.' Now let me tell you, this is nothing like spy novels that I love. This felt more like a sad one-man roadtrip in which the main character occasionally has an assassin sent after him, he is run off the road, or he sleeps with a local woman. There was just a teeny bit of action in this and basically a ton about this man's dreams and memories. He seems to be trying to find out just who he is.I didn't really like the main character and could pretty much care less whenever he found himself in danger. I wasn't really big on his relationship with Gabrielle because he himself wasn't really faithful to her.I was confused by the events at the end and pretty much had no clue what had happened. By that time I didn't even care that I couldn't understand it. This was not the fast-paced spy novel that I was looking for and I can't bring myself to recommend this to anyone. Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the galley.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I first came across the work of James Sallis many years ago when I read his book THE GUITAR PLAYERS, still one of the finest treatises on American jazz and blues musicians. I later found DIFFICULT LIVES, Sallis's superior exploration of the lives and work of crime writers Chester Himes, Jim Thompson and David Goodis. This examined a totally different field, and couldn't be by the same man, could it? It could, and it was.Then his Lew Griffin novels began to appear, and I devoured them all. I fell for the Griffin character, and I loved the way that Sallis sprinkled the books with references to my favourite bluesmen and literary heroes. Eric Frank Russell even -- wow, so he also knows about Sci-Fi!This novel was another new departure. The subtitle is "A novel about spies", and that's just what it is. But not the usual kind we've been used to from the likes of Le Carré et al. No, this is set in the post-Cold War period. The hero, an operative in the old days but now retired, is ordered to apprehend a fellow survivor who has apparently gone ape and is killing other colleagues from the past. The quest takes our hero on a road journey across the USA where everything is not as it first seems. To divulge more would spoil the plot. Sallis is a superb writer, and this book is a hugely entertaining and witty read.