An interesting plot line where the characters are very interesting and typical of local people with prejudices brought about by false information. In this case, they were against a British soldier who they were given information that he was a spy that gave up information to the Germans in WWII that resulted in many of the residents being sent to concentration camps and many dying. The story weaves around who the traitor really is and was very surprised at the ending. The writing was a little stilted but overall the plot good.
The seventh jack higgins / harry patterson novel published in 1963. 159 pages of pure action and adventure. Quite incredible how so much can happen in such a small number of pages. The modern 400 page thrillers seemed to be packed with filler. This is lean, fast and compelling. Plenty of mystery and intrigue. Some really exciting moments and a fantastic flashback in the middle section of the book. Even on a Greek island Higgins can include some of his usual tropes: a dramatic rain storm and brandy used for medicinal purposes. Marvellous.
Surprise, surprise- it starts off strong and gets stronger as time goes by War, murder, mayhem and love seem to follow our hero Thru hell and high water As always the author keeps us on our toes looking forward to the next page. A great read, worth reading a second time to see what we missed. My thanx to Jack Higgins
To quote Hercule Poirot "It stimulates the little grey cells"
Have never read a James Patterson book that I have not enjoyed and I can't say that for other authors this story keeps you trying to figure out,who really is the traitor?
This is another early Jack Higgins novel, originally published under his real name Harry Patterson in 1963 and reissued here in 1989.
It’s a pot-boiler and reveals he was still learning his trade.
Seventeen years after fighting in the Second World War Hugh Lomax returns to the Greek island of Kyros. The last time he was here he’d been on a secret mission to destroy a vital Nazi radio station. Betrayal and capture followed and he barely escaped with his life. Now, he was back to find out the truth.
The Greek islanders haven’t forgotten him and indeed blame him for talking under Nazi interrogation and costing many innocent lives…
The book is split into three parts: 1) Lomax’s return and being confronted by antagonistic islanders; 2) Flashback to the actual landing on the island and the sabotage and escape and capture; 3) Lomax’s life threatened by the islanders while he seeks the truth.
There’s Katina, a local girl, who wears a scarf ‘peasant-fashion’. She’d been a teenager when they’d met in the war; now she was a mature woman who believes in Lomax’s innocence. Resident ex-pat Van Horn is a successful author and doctor; he’d been useful doctoring during the war. Van Horn was also an archaeologist and had a valuable collection, some of which was broken by the Nazi Steiner. Then there are the few Greek men who survived the Nazi depredations: Alexias, Dimitri, Nikoli, among a few others – any one of whom might have been the traitor…
The story is fast-paced, workmanlike, but the denouement is no great surprise.
Sort of a murder-thriller and sort of a World War II saga set in the Greek Island of Kyros in the Aegean. British commandos were sent to Nazi-occupied Kyros in 1943 to blow up a monastery containing a very modern German radar station. They succeed but caught by the Germans and some killed while others were shipped off to Crete to be put in a camp. Hugh Lomax, the captain in charge of the raid, escapes the boat ride to Crete via the Special Boat Service. He returns twenty years later only to find that he was blamed by the Nazi's for identifying all of the local resistance who were largely rounded up with their families and sent to internment camps or killed. Even two decades later the locals want to kill him and he leads them on a merry and deadly chase across the island in order to unmask the real traitor. Great story and good characters and scenery.
I always love finding a Jack Higgins book that I haven’t read before and this one didn’t disappoint. It was fun to go from ‘modern day’ 1960s, back to the start of the tale during WW2, and back to the 60s again. Mr. Higgins had me guessing through the story who the traitor was. There were very few clues to point the way until the end, and as always it ended in the sharing of gunfire. The only thing that I can find wrong with the story is that it needed a continuation in a second book or even an epilogue. Finding this old treasure really brightened up my early November.
While I enjoyed reading a Jack Higgins novel I found the story a little short but now I understand word Lomax character came from now I'm refreshing my memory when he runs into liam Devlin and another one of them Jack Higgins better books
I enjoyed this read. Hugh Lomax returns to Kyros after WWII to visit his "friends", but soon finds his life is in danger. They seem to think that he betrayed the villagers to the Germans, and he has to find out who has placed his life in danger. It is not a long story so you will not find the storyline "padded", as is the case in many books.
Na początku podobała mi się, potem... coś nie zagrało. Mam wrażenie, że autor chciał napisać odgrzewany kotlet, który mu się niekoniecznie chciało pisać. Bohater, który podobno był kiedyś wielkim komandosem, musi być ratowany przez chłopca, idzie bez broni do niebezpiecznych mężczyzn i w sumie... nie wiem nawet po co wrócił na tę wyspę?
Higgins revisits the Greek island of Kyros, finds Lomax not welcomed.
Higgins' heroes always get into more than they bargained for. Hugh Lomax returns to Kyros , gets reacquainted with islanders who remember him, but not in a good way. They want to kill him.
I am an avid fan of Jack Higgins and will read any book he has ever written. I like the simple prose and straight to the point manner of writing.I recommend this book to any one who enjoys intrigue and adventure.
Kudos to Jack Higgins for highlighting this tale of events on this little discussed area involved in World War Two. The Aegean Sea offers a unique setting compared to tales in Britain, France and Germany.
I love Jack Higgins and he has captured WII heroes in the Greek islands. A sad story of survival during the war with German occupation . Hard to put down mystery.
Hard to believe this is the same author who wrote "The Eagle Has Landed". Not much of a story and terrible, choppy writing at about a third grade level.