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立即购买 $12.99 负责任的 巴黎任务:小说(暗夜士兵第 12 册) 美国亚马逊Amazon
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“间谍小说大师。”——《华尔街日报》
“一页又一页令人眼花缭乱。”——詹姆斯·帕特森
纽约时报畅销书
1938 年夏末。好莱坞电影明星弗雷德里克·斯塔尔 (Fredric Stahl) 正在前往巴黎拍电影的路上。纳粹知道他要来——帝国内部的一个秘密局一直在对法国发动政治战争,而对于他们的目的来说,弗雷德里克·斯塔尔是一个完美的影响力代理人。他们不知道的是,斯塔尔对纳粹针对犹太人和知识分子的战争感到震惊,已经成为美国大使馆非正式间谍部门的一员。巴黎使命充满了令人心碎的紧张气氛、精美的浪漫场景以及异常鲜活的人物:外国刺客;一位迷人的俄罗斯女演员出身的间谍;以及斯塔尔生活中的女性。小说的中心是巴黎这座城市——它的小酒馆、宏伟而无名的酒店,以及巴黎人,每天晚上都像他们的最后一个晚上一样生活。艾伦·弗斯特生动地再现了历史上的黑暗时期和为生存而奋斗的人心的激情。
附赠:此版本包含艾伦·福斯特 (Alan Furst) 的《欧洲午夜》的摘录。
对巴黎使命的赞扬
“我们这一代最有才华的间谍小说家。”——文斯·弗林
“生动地再现了 1938-39 年光之城的兴奋和日益阴暗。 。 。没有比这更充满动感和扣人心弦的氛围了。”——《波士顿环球报》
“(福斯特的)最好的之一。 。 。这就是让游客落泪的浪漫巴黎。 。 。 。在福斯特内容丰富的书中,数百个小人物——职员、司机、士兵、妓女——都在一两页的时间内完美地聚焦在他的英雄周围,然后一点一点、一张脸消失,留下一种令人心碎的感觉。第二次世界大战是一部浩瀚的荷马史诗,以及卷入其中的几乎每一个生命的渺小。”——《纽约时报》书评
“一本没有读者读完最后一页才会放下的书。 。 。批评家将(艾伦)福斯特与格雷厄姆·格林和约翰·勒卡雷进行比较,认为他是历史间谍活动的大师。”——《图书馆杂志》(带星号的评论)
“艾伦·福斯特的写作让我想起在完美的一天在完美的水中游泳,流畅而精致。人们希望这种感觉永远持续下去,这本书永远不会结束。 。 。 。福斯特是当今最优秀的间谍小说家之一。”——出版商周刊
ASIN : B005OCYRGW
出版商 : 兰登书屋 (June 12, 2012)
出版日期 : June 12, 2012
语言 : 英语
文件大小 : 3362 KB
文本转语音 : 已启用
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增强排版 : 已启用
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打印长度 : 266 页
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Customers say
Customers find the book very much worth reading, fun, and functional. They describe the writing quality as well-written, easy to read, and rich in imagery. Readers praise the research as insightful and mesmerizing. They appreciate the wonderful descriptions of Paris and the authentic atmosphere. They also describe the author as elegant and thoughtful, painting nice literary pictures of late 1930s/early 1940s Europe. However, some find the pacing quite slow and lacking the compelling tone of his earlier work.
Paris papa from the text of customer reviews
Reviewer: Buzz
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: An Exciting Story of a Darkening Europe
Review: Alan Furst is one of very few authors whose books I automatically read as they are published, without waiting for either professional or readers’ reviews. I’ve yet to be disappointed, and his newest, Mission to Paris, is among his best works. 1938 Europe is a frightening place as the continent inexorably moves to war. It is scary for the participants, but darker for Furst’s readers because we already know what happens. Furst excels as a mood painter and as a chronicler of ordinary people caught in a history not of their choosing. Their reactions and the roles they chose to play, are as varied as human existence. One finds Furst’s novel interspersed with heroes, opportunists, venal and terrifying people, as well as the naive. While Furst’s 1938 Paris is meticulously researched, he does not dwell on the historical, perhaps because we already well know the history (e.g., Hitler’s annexation of Austria and Czechoslovakia, Chamberlain’s appeasement at Munich, and Krisallnacht in Germany). But he skillfully melds events into the thread of his story. Mission to Paris, while having an exciting plot, is not a thriller or page-turner in the sense of, say, a Daniel Silva story, but it is intense and suspenseful enough. This is a most enjoyable book, easy to read, but worthwhile from a literary standpoint.
Reviewer: Suncoast
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Fascinating and imaginative pre-WWII espionage thriller
Review: In late 1938 France is worried about the Nazis and Chamberlain’s infamous Munich deal with Hitler is about to happen. Paris is a hotbed of Nazi intrigue as the Germans try to soften up the country to destabilise the government and slow the building of the Maginot Line.It is around this background that Alan Furst sets this fascinating and imaginative espionage thriller where Hollywood star Fredric Stahl is sent by studio boss Jack Warner to make a film in Paris about soldiers from 3 countries at the end of WWI. Stahl was born in Austria but left for Hollywood several years ago and has little interest in going back to his country of birth which has recently been annexed by Germany.Without his knowledge, Ribbentrop’s Foreign Ministry has plans to use Stahl for propaganda and invites him to Berlin to judge a festival of mountain based propaganda films. Stahl is reluctant to go but is put under pressure by the Germans, especially with threats to Stahl’s parents who still live in Austria. After an almost clandestine meeting with a senior US Embassy official, he is persuaded not only to go to Berlin but also to meet with Olga Orlova. a Russian émigré living in Berlin who is working for the Americans.The descriptions of Paris at that time, especially the people that he meets and works with are interestingly authentic. The descriptions of Berlin and the people he meets are chilling. He arrives on the night of November 9, 1938 “Kristallnacht” which heralded the start of the German offensive against the Jews, with 30,000 German Jewish men being arrested and sent to concentration camps and Jewish property and businesses smashed across the city.Initially, Stahl is an innocent bystander but gradually gets drawn into the conflict as the Germans turn up the heat and he becomes emotionally involved in what is happening to Germany. Furst creates Stahl as an ordinary but caring person, who is thrown into something that is well out of his depth but who finds the ability to protect himself while protecting others.This is an excellent and imaginative WWII espionage thriller that kept me absorbed. I will certainly look out for other books in this series.
Reviewer: David Island
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Il faut en finir
Review: “Mission to Paris: A Novel” by Alan Furst is a strange little (250 pages) book. The title of my review (“Il faut en finir”) translates to “There must be an end to this,” taken from page 192 of this book. It captures perfectly my feeling about this tale: an exceptionally boring first 140 pages (more than half the book), way too many contrived scenarios (the boat scene on the Danube, for instance), and despite the increase of the pace toward the end, a vast disappointment for someone like me, who is a huge Alan Furst fan. I’ve read all his books, but I am sorry to say, this one is his absolute worst. It is a lot poorer than his other recent bomb, “The Spies of the Balkans”, except for the scenes in that book in Paris.First problem. The “hero” and primary character, Fredric Stahl, a Hollywood actor, is an utter boob, unlikeable, self-centered, and missing 2 or 3 light bulbs in his dim-to-begin-with-chandelier, though handsome and suave. At no time ever in Furst’s previous mostly really excellent novels (I highly recommend “Spies of Warsaw”) has his central character been so uninteresting, dull and well ….. virtually unreadable. Stahl, in Paris in just-before-the-war-eerie-1938 to make a movie, is naively drawn into a series of sort-of-espionage activities for the U.S. government to take note of Nazi propaganda and manipulation. This actor really does act his way through the story. Not Oscar material either. He is self-absorbed, seriously in love with himself and supremely boring.Second problem. There is virtually, literally, no action at all for the first 140 pages. Furst reverts to character development (although new characters continually pop up as the novel progresses) and setting the Paris scene (which he is good at).Third problem. The love story between Stahl and the movie’s costume designer is just unbelievable. Their rescue from Hungary by dark background forces operating for the good guys is very difficult to believe. Their final “escape” via Romania, Istanbul, Lisbon to the USA is out-right farcical, including a silly hotel murder scene in Constanta, Romania. Arrgh. (The hotel murder scene in Berlin is, in contrast, very good.)Furst is very good at setting the scene – on a train, plane, taxi, in a restaurant, at a hotel, or in the street, and utilizing the well-known triggers of music, period artifacts, known landmarks, authentic sounds, smells and views, and of course some stereotypical, but good, reference points.There are some funny lines, some sweet scenes and some scary moments: these are classic Furst, and what we really do expect of him these days. The female characters are far more interesting than the males. Of note is the Russian-born female spy Orlova, who actually has a personality. In reference to her sexual adventures, she offers on page 185, this observation about sex: “As long as it didn’t frighten the cat.” Nice.Well, Mr. Furst, you can do better and we expect more from you. This one just doesn’t work. The first 140 pages of “Mission to Paris” kills the book, a self-inflicted murder you probably did not intend.So, it’s a 3, barely, and that is given only because of the fine over-all body of work produced by Alan Furst, still one of my favorite authors.
Reviewer: Cliente Amazon
Rating: 1.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Wrost furst novel ever. So predictable. Cant believe the story. Full of kliches. Alan you can sure do better .cmon
Reviewer: F. Davidson
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: It is amazing Alan Furst is able create the atmosphere of Europe before the war and in Paris during the war. This is especially true of Eastern Europe. Furthermore he writes so well and these stories are full of tension and beautiful descriptions. This is a truly talented writer.
Reviewer: GenieÃer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Wieder einmal zeigt Alan Furst sein Können in der Beschreibung von Charakteren, Schauplätzen und politischen Verflechtungen. Man glaubt ihm jede Zeile seiner fiktiven Erzählung der Nazibedrohung im Jahre 1938, leidet mit den Verfolgten und Bedrohten, verachtet die Nazisympathisanten und ist am Ende froh.
Reviewer: Starlight
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I must confess that I am a fan of Alan Furst’s novels. Mission to Paris is his latest and the quality of his work remains superb. His stories all concern aspects of secret intelligence activity, principally on the part of anti-Nazi citizens of countries occupied by Germany during WWII. Sometimes the principals are professional personnel working in the military or in their country’s government in exile. Others are individuals who unexpectedly get involved in spying, often as a result of their particular profession or trade. The author concentrates on the thoughts, opinions and characteristics of the principals in the stories, surrounding them with wonderfully researched descriptions of their surroundings. He never confuses the reader with large numbers of individuals who are difficult to identify as they come and go as the story progresses.Mission to Paris fits well in the Furst offerings. I recommend it strongly and wouldn’t be surprised if it is made into a film.
Reviewer: homedebbie
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: A l’origine historien, Alan Furst s’est fait une spécialité de ces romans d’espionnage avant ou pendant la deuxième guerre mondiale. héros sombres au passé chargé d’histoires et de regrets, belles héroïnes, traîtres, tout y figure, c’est très classique mais aussi très efficace.
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