Marlowe goes to Cairo.
Cairo in the summer of 1942 is a boiling pot, both physically and metaphorically; under the blistering heat of the African sun, Rommel is driving the nazi troops straight into the heart of the old British protectorate and the city is preparing for a street by street defence. It's a boiling pot in which are melted down all kinds of passions: fear, greed, anger, lust, courage, love.
This is the theatre in which moves our hard-boiled hero, Quinn-Marlowe, where war plans mingle with intrigues and murders; but what is a murder in the middle of a war? In the middle of a city about to crumble under the nazi boot?
For Quinn it's an obsession, also linked to the ghosts of his past.
This atmospheric noir takes us through the darkest corners not only of the city but of the human soul; similar literary space as Yesterday's Spy, not as intense though. The intuition leading to the case resolution looks more like the classic rabbit from the hat than the result of complex analysis, nevertheless this was a pretty satisfying read.
For potential new readers of this author, here's my two cents:
4+ star
Blood Money
The God Of Chaos
Yesterday's Spy
4 stars
Secret Service trilogy (includes Double Agent and Triple Cross)
3stars
Shadow Dancer
2 stars
The Sleep Of The Dead