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Where Dead Men Meet

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A return to the period adventure thriller in Where Dead Men Meet reestablishes Mark Mills as a master storyteller for fans of William Boyd, Charles Cumming, or Robert Harris.

Paris, 1937. Luke Hamilton—a junior air intelligence officer at the British Embassy—finds himself the target of an assassination attempt. A clear case of mistaken identity—or so it first appears. As Luke is hunted across a continent sliding toward war, he comes to learn that the answers lie deep in a past that predates his abandonment as a baby on the steps of an orphanage twenty-five years ago.

From the author of the bestselling The Savage Garden, and set against a terrific backdrop of Europe on the cusp of the Second World War, this is a compelling novel, rich in adventure, espionage, secrets, and lies.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 20, 2017
      The first sentence of this uneven historical thriller from Mills (Amagansett) is a genuine attention-getter: “Had Sister Agnes been less devout, she would have lived to celebrate her forty-eighth birthday.” Late one night in 1937, at a Carthusian nunnery in England, Sister Agnes encounters an intruder who demands information about a baby boy abandoned at the nunnery’s steps 25 years earlier. Sister Agnes knows he’s referring to Luke Hamilton, whose many letters she keeps in a box beneath her bed. When she feigns ignorance, the man bludgeons her to death. Across the Channel, Luke, who’s assigned to the British embassy in Paris, is devastated by the news of the nun’s death. His world is further upended after he’s approached by a person calling himself Bernard Fautrier, which Luke assumes is an alias. At a subsequent meeting, Fautrier warns Luke that if something happens to him, Luke must disappear and take on a new identity. After this dramatic and intriguing setup, the tension gradually peters out. Memorable characters fail to redeem the so-so plot line.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 26, 2017
      Set in 1937, Mills’s novel sends Luke Hamilton, an air intelligence officer in Britain’s Paris embassy, on the run for his life. First, his beloved Sister Agnes, who took baby Luke into an English orphanage 25 years before, is brutally murdered. Then, shortly after a stranger warns him of danger, Luke is nearly assassinated. Chased by unknown forces, Luke races across Europe, surviving bullets, car crashes, duplicitous “helpers,” and even romance with a beautiful, intensely dedicated freedom fighter named Pippi Keller. The novel starts out riveting and loses some of its intensity along the way, but Australian-born reader Linski does his best to disguise this with a brisk narration that maintains its energy and compulsive pacing throughout. His Luke seems initially perplexed by his sudden propulsion into an unfamiliar and very dangerous world, but before long there’s strength and self-confidence in his voice that lets listeners glide through this story of international intrigue. A Blackstone hardcover.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from March 1, 2017

      On a dark and stormy night, a baby is left on the doorstep of an orphanage outside London. Soon adopted, Luke Hamilton grows up to be a junior air intelligence officer at the British embassy in Paris. It's 1937, Europe is on the brink of war, and Luke becomes the target of an assassination attempt. Convinced it's a case of mistaken identity, he carries on until he confronts one bad guy after another. Soon he's running for his life. One hit man finally talks, and Luke realizes that he's not who he thinks he is and that deep secrets lurk behind his childhood abandonment. These are perilous times and competition for survival on the fringes of an unraveling society is fierce. Master storyteller Mills's prior books, Amagansett and The Savage Garden, were both absorbing reads, but this is a pulse-pounding thriller of the first order. Think John le Carre meets Alfred Hitchcock's North by Northwest. VERDICT Believable characters, a richly detailed historical setting, and a story that keeps the reader's attention glued until the final page makes this a worthy addition to the many recent World War II novels.--Susan Clifford Braun, Bainbridge Island, WA

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2017
      Somebody is trying to kill Luke Hamilton, a low-level British intelligence officer in 1937 Paris. Or is it just a case of mistaken identity, like what happened to Roger Thornhill in Hitchcock's North by Northwest? Luke wants to think so, even after one of his would-be assassins has a change of heart and helps Luke escape from Paris, sending him on the run across Europe. If he's not simply the wrong man, he knows the answers must lie in his past. Abandoned at a London orphanage, Luke has no idea who his parents are, but as his misadventures stretch from Germany to Switzerland and on to Italy, he begins to connect the dots. Along the way, he becomes entangled with Pippi Keller, who leads a cell of anti-Nazis who are smuggling Jews out of Germany. Luke's and Pippi's agendas come together, first operationally and then romantically, as the snowballing plot gathers speed and mass. Like Alan Furst, Mills has a sure hand with historical thrillers that mix intrigue, setting, and romance (House of the Hunted, 2012), and, after a five-year absence, it's great to have him back.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

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