I don't really enjoy contemporary true crime, but I very much enjoy the books of Ben Macintyre and Erik Larson. This new book about the first police chief of Paris sounds like it deserves a place at the top of my TBR pile. Alas, it will not be available until next year.
I love the cover line--Murder, Magic, and the First Police Chief of Paris--who isn't going to read a book that offers all that? Holly Tucker is a professor at Vanderbilt University (not to be confused with the singer of the same name), and has written several other historical true crime books. I can't wait to dig into them.
Showing posts with label Ben Macintyre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Macintyre. Show all posts
Monday, August 8, 2016
Monday, June 6, 2016
BOLO: Ben Macintyre's Rogue Heroes
I have a writer crush on author Ben Macintyre. (I hope his wife, novelist/film critic Kate Muir doesn't mind.) The first book of his I read was Napoleon of Crime: The Life and Times of Adam Worth. Worth was a fantastic, movie-worthy character and his greatest crime is actually motivated by passion (and not the murderous kind). Macintyre has a new book coming out in October and I cannot wait to read it. Rogue Heroes is a wartime story of Britain's SAS. I'm not necessarily one for war stories, but Macintyre's books Agent Zigzag and A Spy Among Friends, were enough to put me on his list of "followers" on Amazon. (And somehow I missed his Operation Mincemeat. The subtitle is: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured Allied Victory. Who is NOT going to read a book with that subtitle?)
Even if you prefer fiction to non-fiction, you owe it to yourself to sample Macintyre's work. He's on my list of best non-fiction writers working today. (Since you asked, some of the others are Sebastian Junger, Erik Larson, John McPhee, Joan Didion, Jon Krakauer, Susan Orlean, Barbara Ehrenreit, David McCullough, and Kathleen Norris.)
Even if you prefer fiction to non-fiction, you owe it to yourself to sample Macintyre's work. He's on my list of best non-fiction writers working today. (Since you asked, some of the others are Sebastian Junger, Erik Larson, John McPhee, Joan Didion, Jon Krakauer, Susan Orlean, Barbara Ehrenreit, David McCullough, and Kathleen Norris.)
Labels:
Adam Worth,
Ben Macintyre,
Kate Muir,
Napoleon of Crime,
Rogue Heroes
Saturday, January 19, 2013
Book Review Agent Zigzag by Ben Macintyre
Agent Zigzag by Ben Macintyre is the true story of Eddie
Chapman, a criminal-turned-spy and his role as “Agent Zigzag” during WWII. As always with Macintyre’s books, the characters
here are first rate, with Chapman coming across as a character with a capital
C. He fascinated almost everyone he came
into contact with, from the women who fell for his blue eyes to the man who
“ran” him as an agent for MI5. This was
a man who made his living as a thief, but who also courted friendships with
people like Noel Coward and a young filmmaker who went on to direct the first
James Bond movie.
Eddie Chapman/Agent Zigzag |
Macintyre has a knack for taking footnotes in history and
turning them into riveting non-fiction. The author does a terrific job of
sketching out both time and place, wherever that time or place might be. Whether he’s recounting the story of Eddie’s
early crimes, the night he was arrested while dining with a date or his growing
frustration in prison, there’s always an emotional underpinning to the scenes,
and they spring from the pages in three dimensions. The writer intersperses contemporary
documents with his own narrative, so that we read accounts of Eddie’s crimes
and exploits. It gives a true immediacy
to the events and brings us into his story.
Stephan Graumann, the aristocratic German spymaster who
"runs" Eddie in Germany is very much the antithesis of the clichéd
German spy. He’s an educated and
intelligent man. (And as we learn from
the author’s graceful side trips into context, we know that the Abwehr was
antithetical to Nazi culture. Headed up
by Admiral Canaris, who would later be executed for his part in a plot to kill
Hitler, the German intelligence service sought to serve the country without
serving the Fuhrer.)
The backdrop of events is elegant. In fact, it’s about as far removed from
modern-day spycraft, with its anonymous rooms and bland personalities as it is
possible to be. The Villa de la
Bretonniere is an irresistible setting for Eddie’s schooling.
Labels:
Abwehr,
Admiral Canaris,
Agent Zigzag,
Ben Macintyre,
Dirty Dozen,
Eddie Chapman,
Hitler,
true story
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