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enlarge | Author: Daniel Silva Publisher: Putnam Adult Category: Book
List Price: $26.95 Buy Used: $7.92 You Save: $19.03 (71%)
New (63) Used (72) Collectible (15) from $7.92
Avg. Customer Rating: 92 reviews Sales Rank: 1160
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 433 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6 x 1.7
ISBN: 0399155015 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780399155017 ASIN: 0399155015
Publication Date: July 22, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Clean, nice condition. Expedited orders placed before 3 PM EST ship the SAME DAY. Automatic Upgrade to Priority Mail shipping on U.S. orders over $40. Multiple books ordered from Look at a Book in a single checkout will help you reach the $40 threshold for your free Priority Mail Upgrade! Satisfaction Guaranteed!
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| Customer Reviews:
Silva's heart must be in the Middle East! October 13, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I was so excited to read this book, but somehow it was tepid at best. Perhaps the push to publish novels each year means that even an author as good as Silva cannot keep up the quality. This book lacks passion, and on the Middle East and its horrid conflicts, he is always so very engaged and instructive. MOSCOW RULES is flat, and there is nothing in it that says the author really knows Russia. I have, however, loved all the other books starring Gabriel Allon. Perhaps the next one will return to form.
Cloying October 13, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
I have read all of Daniel Silva's novels and I believe his first (The Unlikely Spy) remains his best crafted, plotted, and most complicated and intriguing novel. With the Allon series, Silva has turned into a formula writer relying on his stock material and common cliches. Silva uses an omniscient point of view and his shifts can occasionally be confusing. His dialogue is often unrealistic, as when a woman states to Allon, "I'm afraid I've yet to find a countryman suitable for marriage and procreation." Allon himself is not introspective or inwardly conflicted, so we're not sure what exactly motivates him to kill on behalf of his government. At the opening of this novel he is honeymooning with his wife in Italy as he restores a painting for the Vatican. Allon allegedly prefers this careful work to performing secret missions for the Israelis, but his actions speak otherwise when Shamron calls him to investigate a Russian arms trader. Allon's wife is relegated to a ridiculous cameo role as a stewardess as Allon jets to the US, Russian, and Israel in the course of his duties. The character of Sarah Bancroft from Virginia is brought in to show her smoldering lust for Allon, who continually disses her. She plays an insignificant role in the plot.
Due to the storyline's necessity to quickly impart information, Silva's authorial presence is often intrusive. Sometimes his writing is awkward, as when he has characters repeat such lines as "I grow radishes and carrots", and "We cannot live as normal people". These are fine, memorable lines that do not need to be restated within the same scene. Silva imputes omniscience to Allon, who apparently knows at all times who's following him. At one point, Allon "glanced over his shoulder" to spot "two aging mobsters and their high price professional dates." Quite often the author writes as if he is presumptively winking at his loyal, comfortable readers. Allon meets a man he mentally sizes up as "a worthy opponent" even before Allon knows if the man is there to help or hurt him. Silva presumes his readers have knowledge of Lubyanka, a prison in Russia, for he doesn't describe it, other than alluding to it as most terrifying place. The same foreknowledge applies to Shin Bet, and the "Sayeret Metkal special forces". Apparently invoking these names with the barest hint of dark intent as context is sufficient for most readers. Many acronyms are not spelled out at all, such as SVR, GID, PET, NSA, NSC, and RSVM.
Silva withholds information, even in the omniscient view, to string the reader along. For example, he has a character ask, "'Who is he?'" The next line is, "She said a name then picked up the wine list." The reader is left in the lurch. Of course, we keep reading to find out who it was.
There are many examples of poor logic. For example on one page (184), the author, in omniscient mode, reveals one of his characters, Boothby, "did not necessarily enjoy hearing about his father." The next page, Boothby says, "...perhaps I'm not as foxy or devious as my old father was." This is awkward prose, and would he really say this, even if he was comfortable talking of his father?
Some of the scenes are so outlandish as to be comic. In a meeting at the CIA in Langley, Allon demands of the CIA chief the NSA telephone communication intercepts (presumably available) of the antagonist, Ivan, a Russian arms broker. The chief responds those intercepts are highly classified, and furthermore such information cannot be turned over to a foreign intelligence service, as Allon works for Israel. Allon casually responds that he'll call someone in the Oval Office, if the chief won't turn over the intercepts. The chief responds: "You wouldn't." "In a heartbeat." "I'll get the material released to you within twenty-four hours. What else do you need?"
A large amount of the plot is devoted to having Allon recreate a masterpiece of art in order to lure a Russian art aficionado, who happens to be the wife of Ivan the Russian arms broker, into a private conversation so that the Israelis can find where this arms broker stores his business transaction records. This elaborate, time consuming ruse is totally unnecessary, and feels fabricated. Allon apparently does not mind working on the forgery in lieu of his restoration project for the Vatican. The reader is left with the sense that all this plot development is wasted when Ivan's wife, upon examining the painting, immediately recognizes it as a forgery. Her quick insight, elaborated upon late in the novel, casts doubt upon Allon's ability in his avocation.
Later, Ivan's wife needs to get to Moscow to attend to her ill mother, or so she tells Ivan. Ivan first wants to send his wife to Moscow on his private jet. When he finds his jet is impounded, Ivan wants to send her on a commercial airline, but with two body-guards. There is no logic to this, for we are told Ivan has surveillance of the apartment of his wife's mother in Moscow, and presumably they should know if the woman is sick or not, not to mention the presence of bodyguards traveling with this woman is unnecessary. There are other examples of strained logic that I won't go into here. In his first novel, Silva had many memorable characters, some quite complicated and engaging, in part because they were not larger than life. His current protagonist is weary of his roles. Allon, should be allowed to retire for a while so that the author can get out of his niche and stock plot formulae. I think Silva's descriptions, which can be vivid, have become more insipid with each of his novels, and his authorial presence more overbearing. And since Silva has ventured to Moscow, I must say that Martin Cruz Smith writes much better descriptions of the specific, often odd details of that locale, or indeed of any of the locales that Arkady Renko finds himself in.
Not so believable...particularly the Audio Version October 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
First, let me comment on the Audio.. It plain stinks. The reader uses some European stereotyped Jewish accent mixed with Russion for the Israeli characters...It makes them all sound evil.. It sounds ABSOLUTELY nothing like an Israeli accent. It changes the tone of the book to hear Israeli's talking like evil Russians with a Polish accent.. just horrible. And he did zero research. He said the word "Chuppah" (a wedding canopy) pronouncing the "ch" like the ch in "chair" instead of a "clear your throat" "H" sound. Anyone Jewish (and lots of Silva's readers certainly will be Jewish, will just laugh at this... it cheapens the writing. I am usually amazed at how good the readers of these novels are...but this one is terrible.
I liked the book itself but some of it just strains your imagination. There is a long sequence where Allon needs to talk with a Russian journalist alone. They meet at a party, eat at a restaurant, then go on a tour of Moscow so they can talk. The whole time they are being shadowed. Meanwhile, Allon is supposed to be a diplomat and not a spy. But he is meeting in full view of all the Russian minders with the journalist closest to the one that the Russians FSB just killed. This is just lazy writing. Clearly he would be seen... and also...during that sequence, they talk in a cemetery within sight of the minders. Like the minders wouldn't have a listening cone that "hears" over long distances (like they have at the football games). This is just a huge plot hole..
sorry....
Exciting October 3, 2008 As always, Danial Silva has written a very exciting and informative book. It fits in very well with todays intrigues and current evernts. Well done!
Daniel Silva Outdoes Himself September 29, 2008 As with all his books Mr. Silva has given us a page turner that wouldn't allow me to fall asleep at bedtime. This one was so on the mark. Can't wait to read his next one. HURRY!
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