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Mission to Paris

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

With numerous New York Times bestsellers to his credit, Alan Furst has become one of the preeminent spy novelists of his time. Transporting listeners to pre-war Europe in the late 1930s, Mission to Paris is populated by Furst's richest cast of characters yet. Arriving in France to work on a film, Hollywood star Fredric Stahl soon joins an informal spy ring working to thwart the Nazis' growing influence.''If you are a John le CarrE fan, [Mission to Paris] is definitely a novel for you.''- James Patterson

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 30, 2012
      Alan Furst’s writing reminds me of a swim in perfect water on a perfect day, fluid and exquisite. One wants the feeling to go on forever, the book to never end. Such is it with this historical spy novel. From September 1938 to January 1939, the reader vividly lives through Paris’s last stormy breaths of freedom before Germany’s attack in 1940. Our unlikely hero is Frederick Stahl, 40, a handsome American movie star, not an action figure but everyone’s favorite silver screen doctor or uncle or romantic leading man. Warner Bros. loans Stahl out to make a picture in Paris. He likes Paris, and he likes keeping Jack Warner happy. But there’s a little known fact in his past that the Nazis can make much of—born in Vienna, Stahl worked as a gopher for the Austrian legation in Barcelona at the end of WWI, and Austria had been an ally of Germany. So when officials in Germany’s political warfare department discover Stahl will be in their sphere of influence, they alert their Paris section to put him on “the list” to be used. From movie studios to embassies, from parties with the untouchably wealthy to a sexy love affair with a sophisticated émigré living in a tenement, Stahl finds himself caught between those who believe France must rearm to fight Germany, and those who are desperate for a negotiated peace. When Stahl refuses to support “peace,” the Nazi threats begin. To retaliate, he becomes a secret U.S. courier, bravely carrying hundreds of thousands of Swiss francs into Germany and Morocco to exchange for intelligence about the Nazis. Reading Furst is the next best thing to having been in Berlin: “Uniforms everywhere.... This country was already at war, though enemy forces had yet to appear, and Stahl could sense an almost palpable violence that hung above the city like a mist.” Like Graham Greene, Furst creates believable characters caught up, with varying degrees of willingness, in the parade of political life. And because they care, the reader does, too. And like Lee Child, Furst captures personality with insightful brush strokes: Stahl’s father had “a face like an angry prune.” Long on an ability to translate good research into great reading, Furst has only two downsides: although threats escalate, little comes of them, and when Stahl takes risks, they tend to deflate. For example, Stahl insists he’s honor-bound to pursue the Nazis who’ve stolen the film crew’s cameras, but he ends up waiting in a rowboat with a gun while others do the dangerous work offstage. And when the woman he loves is held in Budapest for interrogation, Stahl’s solution is to use his box-office status to get her a visa at the U.S. embassy, then phones the William Morris Agency in hopes his agent can come up with an exit strategy. Still, my complaints are minor compared to the breadth and realized ambition of this seductive novel. Furst is one of the finest spy novelists working today, and, from boudoir to the beach, Mission to Paris is perfect summer reading. Agent: Amanda Urban, ICM. (June) Gayle Lynds, the cofounder with David Morrell of International Thriller Writers and ThrillerFest, is the author of The Book of Spies (St. Martin’s, 2010).

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Paris of 1938 is exquisitely rendered by Furst and Daniel Gerroll as war looms, yet life goes on. Frederic Stahl, an American film star, is the target of Germany's political warfare of bribery, intimidation, and ultimately violence in France. Gerroll smoothly moves among Paris's exotic émigrés, the beautiful women, and the film crew with elegant pacing and accents. His coarse American accents punctuate the fluid European tones of the French, Russians, and Hungarians on both sides of the shadowy world. Gerroll delivers the subtlety of Furst's suspense with the quiet menace of the best spy fiction. Intimacy and romance are effectively woven throughout as the listener moves among the extraordinary characters. The idea of Ògentleman's treasonÓ makes an intriguing frame for Furst's latest novel, as powerful as ever, in audio. R.F.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2012, Portland, Maine

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