Details Containing Books Journey Into Fear

Title:Journey Into Fear
Author:Eric Ambler
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Penguin Modern Classics
Pages:Pages: 211 pages
Published:May 28th 2009 by Penguin Books (first published 1940)
Categories:Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. Spy Thriller. Espionage. Crime. Mystery Thriller
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Journey Into Fear Paperback | Pages: 211 pages
Rating: 3.93 | 2925 Users | 191 Reviews

Description As Books Journey Into Fear

It is 1940 and Mr Graham, a quietly-spoken engineer and arms expert, has just finished high-level talks with the Turkish government. And now somebody wants him dead. The previous night three shots were fired at him as he stepped into his hotel room, so, terrified, he escapes in secret on a passenger steamer from Istanbul. As he journeys home - alongside, among others, an entrancing French dancer, an unkempt trader, a mysterious German doctor and a small, brutal man in a crumpled suit - he enters a nightmarish world where friend and foe are indistinguishable. Graham can try to run, but he may not be able to hide for much longer ...

Describe Books Supposing Journey Into Fear

Original Title: Journey Into Fear
ISBN: 0141190302 (ISBN13: 9780141190303)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Colonel Haki,

Rating Containing Books Journey Into Fear
Ratings: 3.93 From 2925 Users | 191 Reviews

Appraise Containing Books Journey Into Fear
Nicely atmospheric thriller. The novel takes place in the months leading up to the second world war. A mild mannered engineer becomes caught up in a situation beyond his control. Really enjoyed the setting of this novel from the seedy bar/cabaret in Istanbul to the claustrophobic steamer. The story motored along at a fast pace and the male characters were well presented. Haven't read the author before, well worth a look at for this genre.

A bourgeois technocrat is targeted for assassination by Nazi agents. As I said last week, Ambler wrote the best spy novels of anybody ever. The plot is airtight, he has a real gift for the internal mechanics of the story. His everyman almost hero is thoughtful and human in a way we dont normally see in this type of book, and he has an admirable subtlety in his character building. Lots of fun.

I wanted to like this book more than I did. I had never read an Ambler story. To many people he is the inventor of the literate espionage/spy novel.Unfortunately, compared with Furst, Greene and LeCarre, this effort comes across as amateurish. The story is a simple one, taking place in 1940 before the German invasion of France. In this case, a naive English armaments engineer, Mr. Graham, becomes the target of German agents who do not want his work for the Turkish government completed. After an

Ive read Eric Ambler twice before, and was entertained both times. This one follows the same basic template average middle-class mild-mannered Englishman suddenly finds himself up to his neck in spy-thriller shenanigans and completely out of his depth as he struggles to comprehend his situation and what to do about it. In this case, armaments manufacturing engineer Mr Graham in Istanbul circa 1940 to help consult the Turkish military on naval guns is shocked to discover someone is trying to

From BBC Radio 4:Unassuming engineer Mr Graham runs for his life across war-torn Europe. Classic 1940s thriller read by Richard Greenwood.I also read the printed version of this book by my rating didn't change.

In this novel set in the months before World War II, Eric Ambler uses his typical heroa novice inadevertently caught up in the world of international intrigueto explore the reality of fear: how it affects perceptions, alters attitudes, and undermines the will, and yet how--if embraced and acknowledged--it may lead an ordinary man to perform an extraordinary action.Our ordinary man is Howard Graham, an English engineer from a British firm who has been assigned to a munitions project for the

I liked A Coffin for Demetrios, and wanted to read more Eric Ambler. All our library system seemed to have was one of those four-in-one volumes of Mr. Ambler's work, of which the first was Journey Into Fear. Having just finished that, I'm glad there are three more (well, really only two, because ACfD is also in this volume and, although I liked it a lot, I'm not ready to read it again.) It's well known I like thirties and WW II espionage stories, and Mr. Ambler does them so well. In this case,

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