A solid Jack Higgins programmer with all the boxes checked. The beautiful and determined heroine who goes into the lion's den. One strong handsome, dangerous but world-weary agent - who is also the heroine's love interest. The Old Man, typically a brigadier/commodore always in civies, who comes across as a real S.O.B. but secretly is torn apart that he must always send good people to certain death in order to make sure that the Greater Good is accomplished. A crucial mission on the eve of D-Day (June 6, 1944) which if it fails will result in disaster for the Allies, an enemy stronghold that must be infiltrated by our heroes, super competent Nazis (though a couple might be sympathetic), doughty French civilians, narrow escapes and a couple red herrings.
Yep, everything is there. Add water, mix well for thirty seconds and let's go.
When I was younger and much more certain about my place in this world, I would sneer at those who read the many novels of Rex Stout, Dell Shannon (Elizabeth Linington), Luke Short, Barbara Cartland and so forth. Typically, the novels of those writers were between 180 - 210 pages. They were churned out reliably and always followed a template. I considered those books to be just trash, but ,as is typical of younger people, I was rather selective and overlooked the fact that I liked to read Jacks Higgins. He was the same type of writer, but different because he wrote about brave resolute people taking on Nazis - though sometimes the Nazis were turned into Soviets with old Nazis in the background. Absolutely not the same thing at all. Okay.
Anyway, my point is "Cold Harbour" is a 33-year-old Jack Higgin's novel. There is absolutely nothing in the novel that will surprise (with the exception that there aren't any noble IRA operatives), but it is still a competently written and entertaining beach novel (read while vacationing in Florida).I picked it up for 50 cents (in 2023!) at a thrift store on Key Largo and read it in a couple days in between various day trips. It worked and did just what it was intended to do. It entertained me. I donated it to another thrift store before we returned home. So that another person can fill the hours between meals, trolly tours and theme parks.
Jack Higgins (Harry Patterson) was a professional who understood what his readers wanted. He always delivered and that is one of the best things that one can have as an epitaph.