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The Spy Paramount

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Spy thriller fiction written in the Golden Age of Murder

'The men who work for you, General', he observed, 'should rid themselves of any fear of death'.

Rome, 1934. Martin Fawley leaves the American secret service and is recruited by General Berati, the most feared man in fascist Italy, as a spy. After a brief encounter with a glamorous yet murderous Italian princess, Fawley's mission takes him undercover to Monaco. Suave and worldly, Fawley is quite at home in the casinos and golf courses of Monte Carlo—but he is soon entangled in a game with higher stakes. As the nations of Europe vie for power, Fawley discovers the secret weapon that will determine the outcome of the looming war.

This classic thriller—undoubtedly an influence on Ian Fleming's James Bond novels—is now republished for the first time since the 1930s. With its yachts and cocktail parties, its steely hero and brutal assassins, and its cinematic range across the cities of Europe, this is a gripping and sophisticated tale of a spy who saves the world.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 12, 2016
      This breathless novel of international intrigue, first published in 1935 and now available as a British Library Spy Classic, follows the adventures of Anglo-American freelance spy Maj. Martin Fawley. A little squabble in a swanky barbershop in Nice leads Fawley to Paris, then to Rome for a meeting in a magnificent apartment in the Plaza Margaretta. That’s just chapter one. By the end of chapter two he has presented himself to General Berati, a sinister spymaster, received a platinum cigarette case with a secret compartment, and wound up in an attractive woman’s bedroom. Fawley subsequently zips along in high-powered automobiles, sips cocktails and chilled champagne, sups on caviar sandwiches, visits heads of state, and plays golf on the Riviera, all while saving the world from another war in Europe. If all of the above sounds vaguely familiar, it comes as no surprise that Oppenheim’s oeuvre was a favorite with the young Ian Fleming. All that’s missing is the racy sex.

    • Kirkus

      A freelance spy saves Europe from another disastrous world war in this sober-sided whimsy Oppenheim (1866-1946) originally published in 1935.Moments after accepting an unspecified commission from Italy's Gen. Berati, Maj. Martin Fawley finds himself pursuing a woman who just tried to kill his new employer. Fawley's initial charge turns out to be examining the armaments he finds just over Italy's border with France and reporting what he finds. But the would-be assassin, a distant relative of the general's wife named Princess Elida di Rezco di Vasena, clearly has ideas of her own about the fate of nations. So in fact does Fawley, who allows himself to be drawn into an internal political struggle between millionaire German industrialist Adolf Krust and the fascists behind the rise of Heinrich Behrling before ending up in London, where his kid brother, Micky, mistaken for him, is attacked and nearly killed. None of this extracurricular activity sits well with the general's secretary, Prince Pietro Patoni, who tracks Fawley to London and discovers Fawley's frenemy Elida in his hotel room. He demands Fawley's return to Italy in no uncertain terms. Not so, declaims Fawley, who reveals that he serves a higher calling than any master: the sacred cause of peace. And indeed, if British Prime Minister Willoughby Johns is correct, Fawley is the one person most likely to prevent the outbreak of war. Does any of this sound familiar? Too vapidly idealistic to deliver reliable entertainment. But readers who first came in from the cold with Ian Fleming and John le Carre will find Fawley a fascinating transitional figure between the old order and the contemporary freelance spies who serve no interests but their own. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      September 1, 2016
      A freelance spy saves Europe from another disastrous world war in this sober-sided whimsy Oppenheim (1866-1946) originally published in 1935.Moments after accepting an unspecified commission from Italy's Gen. Berati, Maj. Martin Fawley finds himself pursuing a woman who just tried to kill his new employer. Fawley's initial charge turns out to be examining the armaments he finds just over Italy's border with France and reporting what he finds. But the would-be assassin, a distant relative of the general's wife named Princess Elida di Rezco di Vasena, clearly has ideas of her own about the fate of nations. So in fact does Fawley, who allows himself to be drawn into an internal political struggle between millionaire German industrialist Adolf Krust and the fascists behind the rise of Heinrich Behrling before ending up in London, where his kid brother, Micky, mistaken for him, is attacked and nearly killed. None of this extracurricular activity sits well with the general's secretary, Prince Pietro Patoni, who tracks Fawley to London and discovers Fawley's frenemy Elida in his hotel room. He demands Fawley's return to Italy in no uncertain terms. Not so, declaims Fawley, who reveals that he serves a higher calling than any master: the sacred cause of peace. And indeed, if British Prime Minister Willoughby Johns is correct, Fawley is the one person most likely to prevent the outbreak of war. Does any of this sound familiar? Too vapidly idealistic to deliver reliable entertainment. But readers who first came in from the cold with Ian Fleming and John le Carre will find Fawley a fascinating transitional figure between the old order and the contemporary freelance spies who serve no interests but their own.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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