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Guns of Navarone #1

توپهاي ناوارون

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An entire navy had tried to silence the guns of Navarone and failed. Full-scale attacks had been driven back. Now they were sending in just five men, each one a specialist in dealing death.

427 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1957

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6159 people want to read

About the author

Alistair MacLean

344 books1,205 followers
Alistair Stuart MacLean (Scottish Gaelic: Alasdair MacGill-Eain), the son of a Scots Minister, was brought up in the Scottish Highlands. In 1941, at the age of eighteen, he joined the Royal Navy; two and a half years spent aboard a cruiser were to give him the background for HMS Ulysses, his first novel, the outstanding documentary novel on the war at sea. After the war he gained an English Honours degree at Glasgow University, and became a schoolmaster. In 1983, he was awarded a D. Litt. from the same university.

Maclean is the author of twenty-nine world bestsellers and recognised as an outstanding writer in his own genre. Many of his titles have been adapted for film - The Guns of the Navarone, The Satan Bug, Force Ten from Navarone, Where Eagles Dare and Bear Island are among the most famous.

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5 stars
7,548 (38%)
4 stars
7,876 (40%)
3 stars
3,540 (18%)
2 stars
496 (2%)
1 star
124 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 588 reviews
Profile Image for Rowan MacDonald.
214 reviews659 followers
June 2, 2022
I wore out the VHS of this growing up, so it was time I finally read the novel!

“Let’s get away from this joint. Gettin’ downright unhealthy round these parts.”

It was impossible not to imagine the likes of Gregory Peck as Mallory, Anthony Quinn as Andrea, and David Niven as Miller while reading this. The Guns of Navarone is fast-paced, just like the film. MacLean doesn’t waste time getting down to business. This is the first novel I've read in a long time that I found hard to put down!

There are numerous differences between the novel and film, yet despite this, I feel both author and filmmakers simultaneously made the right decisions. The futility of war was a strong undercurrent throughout, which made for some fascinating passages, such as mission-leader Mallory’s words to an enemy soldier.

“I regret we have to do all this. I trust we do not meet again - not at least, until the war is over. Who knows, some day we might even go climbing together.”

MacLean’s own war service and Naval experiences really added to the authenticity; especially the language. He knows what he’s talking about and this helped immerse me into the story, often feeling like I was alongside the characters as they attempted their impossible mission.

MacLean’s dialogue was a highlight, while some descriptive scenes came across slightly flowery – though it could be a sign of the era it was written. The character of Dusty Miller was my favourite. His one-liners and sense of humour were a breath of fresh air in often grim circumstances they found themselves in.

“I like the heat. What I don’t like are them nasty cannon shells and bullets that can ventilate a man in all the wrong places.”

All the characters were incredibly well-developed, and unique in their own ways, which helped me forge a connection to them. Stevens had perhaps the most powerful character arc of all, proving that MacLean could write quite emotionally at times too.

There were enough differences between the novel and the film to keep me guessing and occasionally surprised at various characters or plot turns. Overall, it was a very enjoyable, gripping read, and one in which gets me excited to read more of MacLean’s work, particularly the sequel, Force 10 From Navarone.

“More often than not, it is in the darkness of agony and exhaustion that the spirit of man burns most brightly.”
Profile Image for Francesc.
482 reviews284 followers
February 27, 2020
En general, no me ha gustado como narra la acción y tampoco hay mucha. Demasiadas descripciones y muchas, repetidas. Demasiado diálogo y demasiado largo con demasiadas acotaciones.
Poca fluidez. La parte final se hace aburrida.

In general, I did not like how the action is narrated and there is not much. Too many descriptions and many, repeated. Too much dialogue and too long with too many dimensions.
Little fluidity. The final part becomes boring.
Profile Image for Mahdi Lotfi.
447 reviews134 followers
November 8, 2018
داستان" توپ های ناواران " داستان فداکاری و هوشیاری گروهی کوچک است که ضربه ای را به دشمن وارد می کند. شخصیت‌های اصلی، همواره مردانی مقاوم، معتقد به خدا؛ پایبند به اخلاق و تسلیم ناپذیرند.
2000 سرباز گرسنه بیمار انگلیسی در جزیره ای موسوم به « خرس » در آب های یونان گرفتار شده اند و تنها راه دسترسی به این جزیره از طریق تنگه ناوارون است ولی نیروهای آلمانی که کنترل ناوارون را در دست دارند با نصب دو توپ غول پیکر راه عبور رزم ناوهای انگلیسی را مسدود کرده اند. فرمانده انگلیسی به 6 نفر از زبده ترین و بهترین افراد خود که در کوهنوردی و مواد منفجره متخصص هستند، مأموریت می دهد که تا روز حمله نیروی دریایی انگلستان به کمک مقاومت یونانی جزیره ناوارون توپ ها را از کار می اندازند. گروه 6 نفره به سمت ناوارون حرکت می کند و با مقاومت جزیره تماس برقرار می سازد تا آذوقه و مهمات دریافت کند و خود را برای صعود از صخره های بلند و صاف ناوارون آماده کند ولی...
Profile Image for Bob Mayer.
Author 210 books47.9k followers
March 24, 2014
A classic thriller. MacLean always delivered the goods. I remember devouring all of his titles out of the library. I wouldn't suggest doing them in a row, because things can get a little repetitive. But that's to be expected of almost any author.

The concept, of having a team as the only way to take out the guns guarding a narrow straight through which the ships needed to rescue troops, have to traverse is a bit forced. But it does lend to a tight thriller with a clock ticking.

What's best about this book is the interplay among the various agents and then the locals. Betrayal and double-crosses keep the plot moving.
Profile Image for Iain.
Author 9 books120 followers
April 12, 2023
Re-Reading for first time since teenager. Must have made an impression as I remember it quite well! Good old fashioned daring-do action in WW2. No complicated politics or emotions, just good guys trying to save other good guys from bad guys. Cracking adventure writing.
Profile Image for Rodrigo.
1,555 reviews862 followers
October 18, 2024
Me ha gustado, ha sido una gran ambientación, y que lejanos recuerdos de la película venían a mi mente, habrá que revisionarla.
Fue muchísimo mas difícil el camino que la meta , MADRE MIA QUE PENALIDADES para llegar, una vez lograron entrar, fue todo mucho mas "sencillo".
Si os gustan las novela bélicas y el cine bélico, este es un clásico.
Valoración: 7.75/10
Sinopsis: Sobre la sólida roca de un acantilado de la isla de Navarone, en el mar Egeo, se alza la inexpugnable fortaleza del ejército nazi. Sus cañones, famosos por su mortal precisión, son lo único que impide el rescate de dos mil soldados británicos aislados en la pequeña isla de Kheros, cerca de la costa de Turquía. Sobre el capitán Keith Mallory, habilidoso saboteador y experimentado escalador, recae la misión de liderar un pequeño grupo para escalar el peligroso precipicio de Navarone y silenciar de una vez por todas sus cañones.
# 7. El número 80 de tu lista de pendientes de goodreads. Reto literario lecturas pendientes 2024.
Profile Image for W.
1,185 reviews4 followers
Want to read
April 22, 2020
Again,an Alistaire MacLean story works very well on the screen.Gregory Peck,Anthony Quinn and David Niven star.

Action packed and thrilling WW II adventure about a commando unit sent to destroy a German fortress.

Would I like the book to the same extent ? Not sure as I don't find MacLean's writing style particularly elegant.
Profile Image for Anne  (Booklady) Molinarolo.
620 reviews189 followers
May 24, 2012
4.5 Stars

Quite by accident I picked this up and started reading. From the first page, the esteemed war thriller author, Alistair MacLean, engages his reader. Off the coast of Turkey in the Aegean Sea the Germans and Italians control a cluster of islands and the area shipping lanes. On one island 1200 British soldiers are trapped and will soon be attacked by the Axis Alliance. The destruction of the mighty Guns of Navarone is the only hope these Brits have. It is a suicide mission. The guns are protected by both nature and man in their fortress. But a savvy military strategist may have found the how and who to silence these great guns.

Captain Keith Mallory is legendary. The New Zealander is a renowned rock climber and knows how to survive behind enemy lines. His faithful friend (and his good luck charm) Andreas is a Greek resistance fighter has no qualms killing Germans. The young Stevens is proficient in German and Greek is also a great climber, but is afraid of his fear. American Corporal Miller is a demolitions specialist and Brown is known for his saboteur skills. They have 3 days to scale the sheer 400 foot cliffs on the southern side of Navarone, destroy the guns, and get out before the British fleet sails into the Aegean channel to fortify the trapped soldiers. After the climb that almost killed them, the team believes the hardest part of the mission is behind them. But the Navarone fortress proves to be as great of a challenge as the cliffs. They have to choice but to destroy those guns. Many men’s lives are dependent upon their success. And they will die trying to accomplish the mission.

MacLean is a master story teller with intimate knowledge of the military. He served on a cruiser in WWII while serving in the Royal Navy. His writing is fast paced with a great detail that does not bough down the story line. His twists are like gentle waves. They don’t jar the reader. The twists and turns just seem part of the story as its natural progression. Mallory and his team are well characterized. This reader liked and cared about them. Often I caught myself holding my breath as I read the book. In my opinion, the 1961 movie Guns of Navarone just put faces to these wonderful characters. The drama is in the book. Though the film is dramatic and viewers are reminded of the tight time line Gregory Peck, David Niven, and Anthony Quinn have. The book is deeper. The drama and action is more complete due to MacLean’s wonderful writing.
Profile Image for Natalia.
58 reviews24 followers
May 16, 2023
Another very neat action-packed story from MacLean. Many plot twists, many complications to the original story line that move the realization of the plan away to literally the last page of this book. Very likeable protagonists. Recommendable.
Profile Image for Leslie.
2,760 reviews231 followers
September 1, 2018
According to Wikipedia,
"The Greek island of Navarone does not exist and the plot is fictitious; however, the story takes place within the real historical context of the Dodecanese Campaign, the Allies' campaign to capture the German-held Greek islands in the Aegean Sea in 1943. The story is based on the Battle of Leros, and Leros island's coastal artillery guns – among the largest naval artillery guns used during World War II – that were built and used by the Italians until Italy capitulated in 1943 and subsequently used by the Germans until their defeat."

I have seen the film version a few times but found the book more interesting, in part because the reader is given the thoughts of various characters along the way which changed my feeling about some of them. In the book, all the characters are male - I can understand why the 2 natives of Navarone were changed to women in the movie but the story makes more sense this way. Of course, having seen the movie removed some of the tension from the book as I knew what was coming; I admire the way MacLean gives the reader clues to what will come very subtly, almost like Agatha Christie!
Profile Image for Abhishek Chandorkar.
38 reviews1 follower
April 18, 2021
Disclaimer: I have not seen the movie.

This book involves a group of Allied Forces commandos, from various countries clubbed together by a shrewd Captain Jensen. Keith Mallory from New Zealand, Dusty Miller from the US and the calm but deadly Greek Andrea and couple of others attempting the impossible, to silence the great Guns of Navarone controlled by the Germans and thus help to enable the freeing of more than a thousand men from the nearby island of Kheros. The setting is in the World War II era.

They attempt the impossible, climbing a wet, steep cliff in the dead of the night. They get caught a couple of times, but by sheer presence of mind, manage to wriggle their way out, and eventually succeed in their mission.

This book is relentless, there is some action going on throughout the book. The action is good, the plot is excellent and the character development is fascinating.

The reason for 3 stars? Somewhere around 60-70% of the book, I was ready for it to end. I felt the author was stretching it too much at that point. I really enjoyed the first half of the book, but the second half just dragged on until the climax took place.
Profile Image for Ed.
Author 68 books2,711 followers
November 2, 2011
I saw the movie on TV back in the 1960s. Quinn, Peck, and Niven made for an all-star cast. Finally, I read the novel. Well, sir, I'm happy to report that Alistair MacLean could tell the corker of a tale. The Allied saboteurs come through lots of close shaves still intact. At times their heroics leave you rolling your eyes a little, but the fun is watching them strive to carry out their desperate mission. There are betrayals. The pace is snappy, the suspense builds well, and the characters feel full-fledged. I found myself looking forward to getting back to reading the war tale which isn't my usual cup of tea. Your mileage may vary, of course, but I just wanted some diverting entertainment which I found here in spades.
Profile Image for Lisa the Tech.
175 reviews16 followers
August 16, 2024
The 'good guys' are hard-working and likable, the villains are visibly cruel, and MacLean takes care to flesh out his crew of heroes with clear backstories. The action packs a punch, the plot is very much 'against the odds', and the setting adds well to the plot. One day, I will read the sequel. A very good book.
Profile Image for Mijan Rashid.
55 reviews20 followers
July 27, 2025
অ্যালিস্টার ম্যাকলিনের "দ্য গানস অফ নাভারন" দ্বিতীয় বিশ্বযুদ্ধের পটভূমিতে লেখা একটি অ্যাডভেঞ্চার উপন্যাস যার মূল কাহিনী একটি দুঃসাহসিক অভিযানকে কেন্দ্র করে, যেখানে মিত্রশক্তির একটি বিশেষ দল গ্রীসের নাভারন দ্বীপে জার্মানদের দুটি বিশাল কামান ধ্বংস করা নিয়ে। এই কামানগুলো এজিয়ান সাগরের উপর দিয়ে মিত্রবাহিনীর জাহাজ চলাচলকে মারাত্মকভাবে বাধা দিচ্ছিল এবং কাছাকাছি একটি দ্বীপে আটকা পড়া বৃটিশ সৈন্য দলকে উদ্ধার করা অসম্ভব করে তুলেছিল।

মিত্রবাহিনীর উচ্চপদস্থ নেতৃত্ব বুঝতে পারে যে নাভারনের কামানগুলো বিমান বা নৌ আক্রমণের মাধ্যমে ধ্বংস করা সম্ভব নয়। তাই তারা একটি কমান্ডো দল পাঠানোর সিদ্ধান্ত নেয়। এই দলের নেতৃত্বে থাকে নিউজিল্যান্ডের পর্বতারোহী ও প্রাক্তন অলিম্পিক অ্যাথলেট কিথ ম্যালোরি। তার দলে আরও থাকে আমেরিকান বিস্ফোরক বিশেষজ্ঞ কর্পোরাল ডাস্টি মিলার, শক্তিশালী গ্রীক মুক্তিযোদ্ধা আন্দ্রেয়া, এবং আরও কয়েকজন দক্ষ সৈনিক।

এই দলটিকে কঠিন চ্যালেঞ্জ পার হয়ে তাদেরকে নাভারন দ্বীপের দুর্গম পর্বতশ্রেণী অতিক্রম করে গোপন জার্মান ঘাঁটিতে পৌঁছাতে হয়। পুরো মিশনে প্রতিটি পদক্ষেপেই বিপদ ওঁত পেতে থাকে। পথে তাদের শত্রুর সাথে একাধিকবার সংঘর্ষ হয়, বিশ্বাসঘাতকতার মুখোমুখি হতে হয় এবং প্রতিকূল প্রাকৃতিক পরিবেশের সাথে লড়াই করতে হয়। দলটি কি শেষ পর্যন্ত কামানগুলো ধ্বংস করতে পারবে এবং আটকে পড়া সৈন্যদের বাঁচানো সম্ভব হবে? এই প্রশ্নের উত্তর খুঁজতে গিয়ে পাঠক টানটান উত্তেজনার মধ্য দিয়ে এগিয়ে যায়।

"দ্য গানস অফ নাভারন" উপন্যাসে অ্যালিস্টার ম্যাকলিন যুদ্ধের বাস্তবসম্মত চিত্র এবং মানুষের টিকে থাকার অদম্য ইচ্ছাকে অত্যন্ত দক্ষতার সাথে ফুটিয়ে তুলেছেন। এটি একটি দ্রুতগতির, সাসপেন্স-ভরা এবং অ্যাকশন-প্যাকড থ্রিলার যা পাঠকদের শেষ পৃষ্ঠা পর্যন্ত ধরে রাখে।

আমার মতো অনেকের প্রিয় 'মাসুদ রানা' সিরিজের 'দুর্গম দুর্গ' বইটি The Guns of Navarone এর ছায়া অবলম্বনে রচিত হয়েছে 🤓।

আমার অন্যতম প্রিয় অভিনেতা গ্রেগরি পেক এই বই অবলম্বনে নির্মিত চলচ্চিত্র The Guns of Navarone এ ক্যাপ্টেন ম্যালোরি চরিত্রে অভিনয় করেছেন।
Profile Image for Jesper Jorgensen.
178 reviews16 followers
August 13, 2020
This one of the books I read more than once while a young teen. And with pleasure. A simple world back then; the white hats always won. But I ate it raw
Profile Image for George K..
2,759 reviews373 followers
August 20, 2020
Βαθμολογία: 9/10

Τον Μάρτιο του 2016 διάβασα για τελευταία φορά βιβλίο του Άλιστερ Μακλίν, οπότε όπως είναι λογικό μου έλειψαν πάρα πολύ οι περιπετειώδεις ιστορίες του, με τις δυνατές σκηνές δράσης και τα φοβερά τοπία. Αυτό είναι το δωδέκατο βιβλίο του συγγραφέα που διαβάζω και σίγουρα είναι από τις καλύτερες στιγμές της καριέρας του, ίσως μαζί με το "Όπου τολμούν οι αετοί" και το "Πολικός σταθμός Ζίμπρα" (άλλωστε, αυτά τα τρία βιβλία είναι και τα πιο πολυδιαβασμένα του Μακλίν). Λοιπόν, το βιβλίο το κατευχαριστήθηκα. Είχα καιρό να διαβάσω μια συναρπαστική περιπέτεια του Β' Παγκοσμίου Πολέμου και τούτη εδώ ήταν ότι έπρεπε για να έρθω εκ νέου σε επαφή με το αγαπημένο αυτό λογοτεχνικό είδος. Η πλοκή είναι απλή και συγκεκριμένη, μια ομάδα επίλεκτων σαμποτέρ έχει μια δύσκολη αποστολή στο νησί Ναβαρόνε (περιττό να πω ότι δεν υπάρχει τέτοιο νησί στο Αιγαίο), έχοντας να αντιμετωπίσουν τόσο τις δυσκολίες των φυσικών τοπίων του νησιού, όσο κυρίως Γερμανούς στρατιώτες που βρίσκονται παντού και ουσιαστικά γνωρίζουν ότι μια ομάδα σαμποτέρ βρίσκεται στο νησί, για κάποια αποστολή. Το βιβλίο θα το διαβάσει κανείς για την περιπέτεια, για τον τρόπο που οι πρωταγωνιστές καταφέρνουν να τα βγάζουν πέρα ανεξάρτητα από τις δυσκολίες που αντιμετωπίζουν κάθε φορά, για τις διάφορες σκηνές δράσης που είναι χορταστικές και καλογραμμένες, για τις περιγραφές των τοπίων, καθώς επίσης και για τη γενικότερη αγωνιώδη ατμόσφαιρα. Θέλω να πω, το τέλος λίγο-πολύ είναι αναμενόμενο, η γραφή απλή και χωρίς φιοριτούρες, ενώ επίσης δεν υπάρχει ιδιαίτερη εκβάθυνση στους χαρακτήρες. Μιλάμε απλώς για μια καλογραμμένη, συναρπαστική και άκρως ψυχαγωγική πολεμική περιπέτεια, που αποτελεί και βάση για μια από τις καλύτερες ταινίες του είδους. Κατά τη γνώμη μου, οι λάτρεις των κλασικών περιπετειών είναι αδύνατο να μην περάσουν τέλεια διαβάζοντας τούτο βιβλίο.
Profile Image for Em*Greedy* (Iniya).
285 reviews
March 5, 2019
This was a tough read throughout. 5 men-each a specialist in dealing with death, are being sent to the island of Navarone, to destroy the famous and fatal Guns of Navarone. They are going with the skill of mountain climbing, and the knowledge of the Map got from someone who knows Navarone and the surroundings. It was thrilling to read the details of the operation and how these 5 men succeed in doing what the navy were not able to achieve...

Profile Image for David Evans.
830 reviews20 followers
January 18, 2024
When I was 12 or so, one of my friends at school (Michael Edworthy) used to bring this book along every day as a sort of badge along with his Who and Yes albums. He couldn't have been reading it otherwise he'd have finished it rapidly. We were all careful never to mention the book in case he went on about it like he did about the bands. Intrigued, I bought a copy and read the first of the many Alistair MacLean books I was to devour. Set in WW2 this is story-telling for boys of the highest calibre (Ha! what a pun... I've just noticed): a hand-picked group of elite soldiers have to disable the heavily guarded monstrous weapons that cover a strait of water shortly to be traversed by an allied shipping convoy. Simples.

The usual early MacLean trademarks are all here: a mission with small chance of success; fifth columnist infiltration; self-sacrifice that brings tears of pride and edge of the seat tension and action. (See "Where Eagles Dare", "HMS Ulysses") No wonder Hollywood adapted it with Gregory Peck, David Niven, Anthony Quinn et al. But, as is so often the case, the book is even better than the film.

Oh, and I adapted it many times for English essays so my O'Level grade A is down to this plot.
Profile Image for Sean Peters  (A Good Thriller).
823 reviews116 followers
December 11, 2025
It's always so nice to go back to your childhood, the first books I read were Alistair Maclean.

Then I grew up watching the films over and over again.

Now I am returning to my childhood and reading some of my all time favourites, the books and the films to me that rate the best, this is one.

This will be remembered as the best film cast, of all his books.

The classic World War II thriller from the acclaimed master of action and suspense.
The Guns of Navarone, huge and catastrophically accurate, embedded atop an impregnable iron fortress in the Mediterranean Sea.

Twelve hundred British soldiers trapped on a nearby island, with no hope of rescue from Allied ships, waiting to die.

Keith Mallory, world-famous mountaineer, skilled saboteur. His mission: to lead a small team of misfits and silence the guns forever.

Reaching the island and scaling the sheer cliffs undetected will be hard enough; defeating the German forces and destroying the massive guns all but impossible. And as for getting out alive when there may be a traitor in the team…

Filled with suspense, shocks, tension and action

5 stars
Profile Image for Hajarath Prasad Abburu.
122 reviews38 followers
March 7, 2019
It was very interesting and remained that way through out the book, but could've done without the long winding descriptions, especially of the thoughts of the five brave people who embark on a mission that is deemed impossible. Written in an episodic manner, it manages to keep the reader hooked to it. Action scenes looked authentic except when a big guy is fighting (😋).

The characters, despite being different from each other, were mostly one-note. This probably has something to do with the vision of the book, which might have had it's horizon set elsewhere. Nevertheless, a good book overall!

Profile Image for Nicola.
538 reviews69 followers
November 10, 2019
3 1/2 stars

An excellent war time spy/special forces read. I'm not really the target audience but even I appreciated it which might say much. Or nothing at all. There's plenty of action, some pretty well drawn characters (considering the sort of book it is), a bit of pathos and 'isn't war hell!'. Also lots of bromance (there isn't a single woman in the book). Not bad at all.
Profile Image for Randell Carlton Brown.
Author 3 books34 followers
December 19, 2019
Continuing to raid my mum’s library, and quickly picked up my first Maclean novel. Action packed, and maybe slightly long in the tooth. Maclean is as skilled of a writer as his contemporaries, Jack Higgins & Hammond Innes. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿
Profile Image for J. Moore.
Author 22 books47 followers
July 22, 2015
This is one of the books that took me at the edge of my seat. The action felt so real. I'm thankful that a friend recommended this to me.
Profile Image for Philip.
1,772 reviews113 followers
December 11, 2018
Whew! Finally finished rereading all the Alistair MacLean books that I enjoyed so much as a teen, beginning with 1957's outstanding HMS Ulysses and running through 1968's Force 10 From Navarone, (after which it's pretty much universally acknowledged that the quality of his books took a pretty steep dive).

Guns of Navarone is consistently and deservedly listed among MacLean's top 3-4. And yes, it features some of the ultimately predictable plot twists he loved to sprinkle in his stories - "the good guy was really a bad guy pretending to be good, but then he really WAS a good guy!" - but remember, this was only his second book (the first being a straight-up combat story), and so was still pretty original for its time.

Like a lot of older (and usually British) authors, I have to read with a dictionary - or at least Google - close at hand. In this case I had to turn for help on the following:

"Three days to go, engine u.s., and a first-class bloody mess..." - took a LONG time to find an explanation here on a WWII-era list of naval abbreviations; "u.s." or "u/s" stood for "unserviceable."

"Now he squeezed the trigger four times, for he wanted to mak' siccar..." - early etymology of "massacre," perhaps? Nope; turns out it's an obscure Scottish term literally meaning "to make sure," relevant here as the character shooting was Scottish (like MacLean himself).

Along with Ulysses, Navarone was also one of MacLean's few books to have no female characters - generally a plus in his case as he was NOT a strong writer of female roles. That was changed (along with a lot of other things) in the film version, where the characters of Louki and Panayis were changed to Andrea's sister and a friend. (Also in the movie, the very American character of Dusty Miller was unfortunately played by the very British David Niven - never a good casting choice.)

There's still a lot of unread MacLean out there - including his last book of the 60's, Puppet on a Chain, which I may or may not have read before. But for now at least, I'll say farewell on a particularly high note.

INTERESTING OBSERVATION: I'd say the majority of "likes" or comments on my MacLean reviews come from GR friends in South or Southeast Asia, where apparently he remains better known and appreciated than he is here in the U.S. - so glad to see he is still getting the respect he deserves in SOME parts of the world!
Profile Image for Leah.
1,733 reviews290 followers
March 1, 2024
Mission impossible…

1943 – The Aegean. Twelve hundred men are trapped on the small island of Kheros, off the coast of Turkey. Soon the Germans will arrive in force, and the men know that they will either die or be captured. All the forces of the Allies are unable to get to Kheros to evacuate the men, for on the island of Navarone, a few miles away, there is a massive cliff-top fortress guarding the channels between the islands, complete with a battery of massive guns…

“The guns of Navarone.” Jensen paused for a long time, then repeated the words, slowly, expressionlessly, as one would repeat the name of some feared and ancient enemy. “The guns of Navarone. They make everything equal. They cover the Northern entrances to both channels. We could take the twelve hundred men off Kheros tonight – if we could silence the guns of Navarone.”

Capatain Jensen, Chief of Operations for SEO in Cairo, has tried to silence the guns with raids from sea and air, but each time they have been repulsed with deadly force. Now he has put together a small team, each with special expertise, and tasked them to get onto the island of Navarone and spike the guns before the German force arrives to take Kheros. The team is headed by Captain Keith Mallory, a New Zealander who in pre-war days was probably the most famous mountaineer of his time. He has been fighting in the mountainous regions of Crete, alongside his Greek friend and companion-in-arms, Andrea, a ruthlessly courageous man who has personal reasons to hate the Germans and whose loyalty to Mallory is complete. Then there’s the American, Dusty Miller – an explosives expert, whose expertise as a field medic will come in useful too. Casey Brown, the Glaswegian, is an engineer, his skills developed in the shipyards of the Clyde. He’s the one who will have to get them to the island and who’s in charge of the vital radio equipment that will keep them in touch with HQ. And then there’s young Andy Stevens, another mountaineer and fluent in Greek, but hiding the secret of his own cowardice. As they make their way through hazards on sea and land, this group of disparate people will meld into a team, each reliant on the skills of the others to survive, and each with the knowledge that not only their own lives but the lives of twelve hundred men depend on the success of their mission…

With this kind of adventure thriller, there’s a kind of sweet spot in the characterisation that makes the book either succeed or fail. Firstly the characters have to be likeable, but they also have to have flaws or they become unrealistic. Secondly they have to be heroic, but their heroism has to be at a level the reader can just about imagine achieving or they turn into superheroes – still fun, but no longer inspiring that feeling of empathy that brings the suspense of caring about their fates. Thirdly, they need to be in genuine jeopardy – this usually necessitates killing one or two of them along the way! On the whole, MacLean achieves all of these objectives, although Andrea rather falls into the superhero category and so never felt as real to me as the other characters. I also rather quickly tired of Andy Stevens’ obsession with his own feelings of cowardice – it was such an obvious ploy that he was going to find bravery at the crucial moment and redeem himself, so there was no real element of surprise to his story. The other three hit the sweet spot nicely, though, each having moments of failure to make their moments of heroism and success stand out more, and MacLean does an excellent job of showing them each gain more respect and admiration for the others as they learn to work together.

The book was first published in 1957, which was probably too soon after the war for the patriotic jingoism to have completely worn off. MacLean does point out the futility of much of the death and destruction a couple of times, and occasionally he hints that a particular German might have been a decent man in civilian life, but on the whole this is a story of brave and righteous Allies fighting against evil and rather stupid Nazis. He gives a slightly odd depiction of the Greeks, as brave undoubtedly, but still not quite the equal of the English-speaking nations. It’s of its time and not nearly as off-putting as some writing of the era, but it still jars a little now. I was glad that he avoided making the Glaswegian either a comedy drunk or an aggressive fighting-cock of a man – being Glaswegian himself may have helped him avoid those stereotypes!

Of course the story becomes incredible – don’t they always? These men are bashed over the head, shot, stabbed, blown up, starved, frozen, fall off cliffs, and yet they bounce back each time to carry out feats most of us couldn’t do even after six months of intensive training. They develop an all-for-one mentality which is in contrast to the nasty German habit of sacrificing their soldiers cheaply with no compunction. And again, so soon after the war, when most of the readership would either have served or had a father who served, there was no way that the good guys wouldn’t win – people still had to convince themselves that the sacrifices had not been made in vain, which for the most part was probably true. But MacLean does show the hard-headed heartlessness that those in charge sometimes had to adopt – sacrifices made for greater gains.

Overall I felt the setting was done very well – the rugged terrain, the sheer cliff-faces, the angry sea, the snow – no idyllic Greek island vacation this! The characterisation too is good, with the exceptions I’ve already mentioned. And while the outcome of the plot is never in much doubt, it’s an exciting adventure getting there. Definitely a classic of its genre although, to me, that genre of WW2 adventures feels a little more dated than others now.

www.fictionfanblog.wordpress.com
Profile Image for Michelle.
613 reviews
December 6, 2018
"There are no brave men and cowardly men in the world, my son. There are only brave men. To be born, to live, to die - that takes courage enough in itself, and more than enough. We are all brave men and we are all afraid, and what the world calls a brave man, he too, is brave and afraid like all the rest of us. Only he is brave for five minutes longer."
Profile Image for Madeline.
172 reviews
October 24, 2023
Not my typical book choice, but my dad recommended it to me and I really enjoyed it! I listened to the BBC radio dramatization (Also asked my dad if that counted as a book read 😂 he said yes!). I always walk away from war books just realizing all over again how hard and ugly war is and how it affects more than just the ones fighting it.
Profile Image for Indah Threez Lestari.
13.4k reviews270 followers
August 31, 2013
555 - 2013

#Program BUBU

Kalau diminta menyebutkan novel perang favorit, pasti jawabanku sama saja dengan kalau ditanya siapa penulis favorit. Banyak, euy. Kalau novel tema perang, dari rak bukuku di Goodreads sudah bisa kelihatan penulis-penulis mana saja yang jadi favoritku. Nah, untuk posting bareng BBI bulan Agustus 2013, aku memilih novel Alistair MacLean yang ini, buku pertama yang membuatku menjamah genre perang.

Tidak jelas alasannya kenapa aku memilih untuk membaca buku yang versi terjemahannya pertama kali diterbitkan Gramedia tahun 1977 ini. Tapi sepertinya sih awalnya cuma coba-coba saja, melebarkan wilayah bacaan, atau mungkin agak bosan membaca cerita detektif dan cerita silat. Sebagai tambahan informasi tidak penting, waktu itu aku masih SMP, masih rajin menyewa buku ke Taman Bacaan Aneka di Jl. Tamansiswa Bandung, dekat Pasar Palasari. Meskipun jauh dari rumah, setidaknya cukup sekali naik angkot dari sekolahku di Kebun Kelapa.

Waktu itu, aku tidak tahu siapa Alistair MacLean, belum pernah membaca satu pun bukunya, dan jelas belum ada internet untuk sekedar mencari tahu. Dan kalau dilihat dari gambar sampulnya, rasanya kurang menarik. Iya sih, yang bikin gambar Dwi Koen, dengan ilustrasi semi realistis. Tapi coverboy-nya nggak banget deh, cameo tentara Jermannya apalagi. Sudah gitu, di sampul belakang tidak ada sinopsisnya, cuma endorsement dari surat kabar di Inggris Raya (yang jelas pasti sudah lama banget, berhubung copyright novel ini tahun 1957), yang sama sekali tidak memberikan gambaran tentang apa novel ini sebenarnya:

Jalan ceritanya lancar dan mudah diikuti... (Sunday Times)

Kekuatan novel ini bersumber dari kelancaran jalan ceritanya, cara si Pengarang mengungkapkan ketegangan dan kemampuannya melukiskan adegan-adegan seru! (Evening Standard)

Penuh adegan seru. Penuh ketegangan dari awal sampai akhir. Sebuah problem yang hanya dapat dipecahkan dengan keberanian dan menempuh bahaya... sebuah kisah yang amat mencengkam. (Scotsman)

Sebuah cerita bagus yang diceritakan dengan cemerlang -- Kalau Anda membacanya sekali, dengan cepat, Anda akan dapat menikmati ketegangannya. Tetapi kalau Anda membacanya sekali lagi, Anda akan dapat menikmati detailnya yang halus... (Birmingham Post)

Petunjuk tentang apa buku ini sebenarnya hanya judul yang mencantumkan "meriam" dan gambar tentara Jerman yang membawa-bawa senapan di sampulnya. Oke deh, karena kata koran-koran Inggris itu buku ini jalan ceritanya lancar dan seru, mungkin patut dicoba untuk dibaca. Dan ternyata... I'm hooked!!! Buku ini menjadi awal dari novel-novel Alistair MacLean lainnya, serta penulis-penulis sejenis, dari Jack Higgins, Frederick Forsyth, sampai Tom Clancy.

Jadi, tentang apa buku ini sebenarnya?

Pada zaman dahulu kala, di era Perang Dunia II pada tahun 1943, saat kepulauan Yunani dikuasai Jerman, tersebutlah sebuah pulau bernama Navarone. Jerman yang menduduki pulau itu memiliki benteng dengan meriam-meriam yang sulit dihancurkan dan mengancam keselamatan kapal-kapal Inggris yang numpang lewat di perairan Aegea. Inggris berencana menyelamatkan 1200 tentara dari pulau tetangga, tapi khawatir kapal pengangkut akan dibombardir tanpa ampun kalau melewati selat Navarone. Berbagai cara dilakukan untuk menghancurkan meriam benteng Navarone, tapi selalu gagal. Akhirnya dikirimlah tim khusus untuk menyusup ke pulau Navarone dari jalan yang paling berat: tebing yang konon tak bisa dipanjat manusia manapun di selatan pulau. Anggota tim dipilih berdasarkan keahliannya, dan dipimpin oleh Kapten Mallory, yang pada masa damai merupakan pemanjat tebing terulung di Selandia Baru.

Waktu yang tersisa untuk menghancurkan meriam laknat itu hanya satu minggu, dan pembaca dipaksa mengikuti setiap jamnya. Dimulai dari saat Kapten Mallory bertemu dengan Kapten Kepala Operasi SOE yang merancang mission impossible itu, berangkatnya tim yang dikumpulkan secara khusus: mulai dari Andrea si mesin perang Yunani, Dusty Miller si ahli bahan peledak dari AS, Casey Brown si ahli mesin, dan Andy Stevens yang juga seorang pendaki gunung, dilanjutkan dengan adegan panjat tebing yang mendebarkan, dan seterusnya.

Pada akhirnya, harus diakui endorsemen surat kabar Inggris itu memang benar adanya. Pembaca otomatis tenggelam di dalam cerita, dan kemungkinan tak bisa berhenti membaca sebelum menamatkannya, karena terpompanya adrenalin saat mengikuti misi bunuh diri tim khusus Kapten Mallory. Ya, buatku membaca buku ini seperti menonton film aksi yang asyik.

Karenanya... pantas-pantas saja kalau pada tahun 1961 novel ini diangkat menjadi film aksi, yang dibintangi oleh Gregory Peck (sebagai Kapten Mallory), Anthony Quinn (sebagai Andrea) dan David Niven (sebagai Dusty Miller).


Film ini termasuk 8 besar box office pada tahun itu, dengan bujet USD 6 juta dan penghasilan kotor nyaris lima kali lipatnya. Untuk ajang award, film ini juga memenangkan Golden Globe untuk kategori film terbaik dan original score terbaik serta memenangkan Academy Award untuk special effect terbaik, selain nominasi untuk kategori-kategori lainnya. Dan kalau diintip di IMDB, ratingnya juga bagus, sekitar 7,6.

Pengalaman memuaskan dengan buku ini membuatku akhirnya menjadi salah satu penggemar karya-karya Alistair MacLean, mencari dan membaca buku-bukunya, dari membaca buku-buku terjemahan Gramedia yang jadi favoritku juga (di antaranya The Satan Bug, The Golden Rendezvous, dan Where Eagles Dare), membaca terjemahan non Gramedia (secara umum kecewa dengan terjemahan dan editingnya, karena seringkali boleh dibilang bukan terjemahan melainkan ringkasan!), sampai membaca buku-buku hardcover aslinya kalau belum ada terjemahannya (sengaja jadi anggota Perpustakaan ITB supaya bisa pinjam!).


Alistair Stuart MacLean (21 April 1922 - 2 Februari 1987) adalah novelis Skotlandia yang menulis cerita thriller dan petualangan populer. Karyanya yang paling dikenal adalah The Guns of Navarone, Ice Station Zebra, dan Where Eagles Dare, yang juga sukses dalam versi filmnya.
Profile Image for Benjamin Thomas.
2,002 reviews372 followers
January 22, 2018
During World War II, five men are recruited to achieve the impossible: destroy a German fortress that threatens Allied Naval operations in the Aegean Sea and prevents over 1,200 isolated British soldiers from being rescued. These five men are all experts at various specialties required by the commando operation, including demolitions, engineering, and most provocatively, mountain climbing since access to the fortress is impossible without scaling a sheer cliff face.

Even though the Greek island of Navarone does not actually exist, the story takes place within the real historical context of the “Dodecanese Campaign”, (specifically the Battle of Leros), the Allies' attempt to capture the German-held Greek islands in the Aegean Sea in 1943. Only the second novel by Alistair Maclean, this 1957 World War II novel has been considered a classic of the genre for decades now. These days, of course, stories or movies about a handful of talented men, each with specific specialties, teaming up to pull off a near-impossible task are a dime a dozen but I dare say many of them owe quite a bit to this book. In 1961, a classic film was produced staring Gregory Peck, David Niven and Anthony Quinn, among others.

I’ve read a number of Alistair MacLean books over the years and usually find them OK, but notice they do tend towards the “slow-burn” style, taking quite a while to build to their climax. This one, however, kept me riveted throughout. It’s easy to see why this has become a classic: excellent characters, plenty of edge-of-your-seat suspense, and wonderful pacing. MacLean didn’t believe in much of a wrap-up after the major climax and this one is no exception. The big story payoff was literally on the last page of the book.

I’m very glad I finally got around to reading this one, and now have my sights set on the sequel, Force 10 from Navarone. I’m also planning to see the Guns of Navarone film this week so as to fill another hole in my WWII film history.
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