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A Very Large Consulate

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When Inspector Roger Bastide investigates a corpse dumped in the driveway of the Soviet consulate in Marseilles, he finds himself caught in a complex web of espionage plots and stalked by the KGB

Hardcover

First published August 1, 1988

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Howard R. Simpson

17 books3 followers

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2,963 reviews107 followers
August 15, 2022
i don't see many reviews but there is a mention here

Kirkus Reviews

SOMEONE ELSE'S WAR
BY HOWARD R. SIMPSON ‧ RELEASE DATE: NOV. 1, 1995

A tired and disillusioned longtime CIA operative in Vietnam is ordered to terminate one of his agents, also his only friend, as Simpson (A Very Large Consulate, 1988; etc.) continues to mine his 1950s and '60s past as a USIA officer in Vietnam. Bob Fraser is from the new old school of US diplomats in Vietnam, sharper than the virtual colonialists who preceded him and something of an old fogy beside the new kids, with their trim physiques and fluidity in Vietnamese. Relegated to a quiet coastal backwater town after an ``incident'' in Saigon, Fraser is somnambulistic and hardly able to imagine a future for himself. (Indeed, he seems to have no past either: Simpson leaves Fraser bereft of family background or physical description, and hardly even mentions his name until well into the book.) Fraser finally wakes up, however, when he is ordered to assassinate one of his own men, Arnaud Caze, a former French agent whom Fraser later recruited. Caze has been Fraser's one buddy and confidante in Vietnam since the two met outside a cafÇ bombing soon after Fraser's arrival. They share a common cynicism and a growing sense of walking in place beside ``someone else's war.'' Fraser, though, is shocked when told that Caze is a double-agent working for the North Vietnamese. A botched assassination attempt during a fishing trip puts Fraser officially off the job but unofficially on the streets of Saigon with a loaded gun. As luck would have it, it's the weekend of the Tet holiday 1968. While the city explodes around them, Fraser and Caze fight their private, and not so private, battle. Fraser's (lack of) character is unfortunate, and the story unfolds slowly and with little suspense, but, still, it's an interesting one, set in a place and time that Simpson evokes with skill and obvious knowledge.
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