An authorized agent again, Charlie Muffin must thwart an assassination attempt that could turn the tides of the Cold War
It could be the most sensational defection of all time. The head of the Russian KGB’s cipher section comes with every code, every plot, every secret. But his most startling disclosure of all is that the Russians are planning a shocking assassination.
But the defector doesn’t know who. Or where. Or how. Or when. All Charlie knows is that he must stop the murder from happening—without being marked for death himself.
This ebook features an illustrated biography of Brian Freemantle including rare photos from the author’s personal collection.
Brian Freemantle [b. 1936] is one of Britain's most acclaimed authors of spy fiction. His novels have sold over ten million copies worldwide. Born in Southampton, Freemantle entered his career as a journalist, and began writing espionage thrillers in the late 1960s. Charlie M (1977) introduced the world to Charlie Muffin and won Freemantle international recognition—he would go on to publish fourteen titles in the series.
Freemantle has written dozens of other novels, including two featuring Sebastian Holmes, an illegitimate son of Sherlock Holmes, and the Cowley and Danilov series, about an American FBI agent and a Russian militia detective who work together to comabt organized crime in the post-Cold War world. Freemantle lives and works in London, Englad.
The entire Charlie Muffin series is fantastic, but I just want to know what half-wit illustrator painted a five pointed star on the Israeli flag? Brian Freemantle seems to hop between publishers and most editions have terrible mass market cover designs more suited to a grocery store checkout lane than an excellent and engaging espionage novel with such deep character development.
The disheveled, footsore, reverse snob spy who manages to piss off almost everyone in authority does it again. An edge-of-the chair adventure with enough twists, irony and revenge to keep his fans more than satisfied.
This series is like a fallback option for me when I can't figure out which audiobook to listen to next. I started this book pretty much immediately after finishing the previous book and being familiar with the narrator makes it an easy book to listen to.
This book has a Day of the Jackal feel to it but isn't at that level. Charlie is trying to prevent an assassination in Europe while dealing with resistance from all other parties. The fact that it deals with a peace deal between Israel and Palestine made me a bit sad to think that 36 years after this book was published, there is still no peace in the region.
It was interesting that back in 1988, it was clear to people that the Israelis
I feel like unlike most of the other books in this series, this directly sets up the next book which I will read, though I will try to find something else to listen to in between.
Like Forsyth, Brian Freemantle is a journalist-turned novelist - but a far better writer, more interested in the dynamics of character and personality with the interplay of bureaucratic politics both within and without organizations. In this thriller about the countdown to an assassination, Freemantle doesn't manage the atmospheric effect Forsyth did for his 1971 classic, but wears his extensive research far more lightly - and makes the politics believable. His prose is crisp and clear; LeCarre without the longeurs. Charlie Muffin, despite his rumpled appearance and comical name, is far more engaging and believable a protagonist than the superhuman killing machines that populate far too many thrillers.
This my my fourth Charlie Muffin book and a pattern is emerging: Charlie Muffin is a smart-ass, actually the only smart-ass in the room. He’s mister “I-know-it-all” and the rest of the world is a bunch of incompetent idiots; the only one getting close to his level of smartness is his adversary, so not to banalise his successes. Charlie Muffin is so indispensable and irreplaceable that he’s allowed to be a total maverick and to breach every rule. There’s a point when this formula wears out....The Run Around was such point for me.
I guess I'm done with this series because the coarse language is a bit much. The f-word appers over 20 times. For someone unaccustomed to hearing language like this, it's jarring.