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Quiller #8

The Sinkiang Executive

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Librarian Note: this is an alternate cover edition - isbn: 0385122764, isbn13: 9780385122764

In the eighth Quiller suspense novel, the British agent finds himself once again playing a lone cool hand, and this time his superiors don't expect him to return alive--nor do they much care!

Having rashly paid off an old personal debt by eliminating a Russian operative, Quiller learns that the price of his vengeance is extraordinarily high when he faces summary dismissal. But London will reconsider his "retirement" if he will take one more mission. He has no choice.

The target: the frozen wasteland of the Sino-Soviet border. The key to the target: a captured Russian jet fighter. Only by an act of daring and with a lot of luck will Quiller even gain entry into Russian airspace... and no one has bothered to figure how Quiller will get out!.

229 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1978

7 people are currently reading
105 people want to read

About the author

Adam Hall

157 books99 followers
Author also wrote as Elleston Trevor.

Author Trevor Dudley-Smith was born in Kent, England on February 17, 1920. He attended Yardley Court Preparatory School and Sevenoaks School. During World War II, he served in the Royal Air Force as a flight engineer. After the war, he started writing full-time. He lived in Spain and France before moving to the United States and settling in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1946 he used the pseudonym Elleston Trevor for a non-mystery book, and later made it his legal name. He also wrote under the pseudonyms of Adam Hall, Simon Rattray, Mansell Black, Trevor Burgess, Roger Fitzalan, Howard North, Warwick Scott, Caesar Smith, and Lesley Stone. Even though he wrote thrillers, mysteries, plays, juvenile novels, and short stories, his best-known works are The Flight of the Phoenix written as Elleston Trevor and the series about British secret agent Quiller written as Adam Hall. In 1965, he received the Edgar Allan Poe Award by Mystery Writers of America and the French Grand Prix de Littérature Policière for The Quiller Memorandum. This book was made into a 1967 movie starring George Segal and Alec Guinness. He died of cancer on July 21, 1995.


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5 stars
82 (34%)
4 stars
103 (43%)
3 stars
45 (18%)
2 stars
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Feliks.
495 reviews
November 18, 2014
I'm ramping up my rating--for anything written by Adam Hall--to a consistent 4 stars. The guy is just wild. Ferocious.

Up to now I've allowed myself to be lulled into complacency by the first volume in the Quiller series. That particular book asserted a few key aspects about Quiller which dupes one into assuming Quiller is always going to be quiet, cerebral, and somewhat passive. He doesn't carry a gun. He is sly and wily and avoids fights if possible.

But these were apparently character-elements strictly tied to just that first, unusual Hall novel. It was moody and atmospheric, set in Berlin, and nothing much happened, plot-wise. Hall established there too, that Quiller has a particularly obsessive hatred for neo-Nazis... and so when you glance over the rest of the Hall library you wonder why Hall is sending him all over Asia and Russia.

But 'Sinkiang Executive' is a powerful example of action-espionage writing which demonstrates that all of Hall's other Quiller books are urgently deserving a read. This one is phenomenal!

Hall is a confident author; fully in control of his craftsmanship. He has that great 1970s knack (shared by Forsyth, Follett, etc) which was so common back then and so rare now: the pages race by as fast as you can read. He never fumbles a single sentence. You wonder how the hell he does it: the technical details are so rich and convincing and powerful. This novel involves Quiller (who knew he was a pilot? I though he was a former US military intel?) flying a decoy Mig28 into Soviet airspace (similar to Craig Thomas' "Firefox") and deliberately being shot down to carry out a ground mission. It's just astounding: Hall has all the factoids about air defense systems and air traffic radio frequencies down pat.

What's more--even with all this absurdly rigorous sequence to describe and get correct, Hall's writing itself never lets up pace. He barrels from chapter to chapter with nothing left out, and no letup in tension. Do you realize how tough that is to do? This is top-quality action-thriller writing technique on display; the caliber is as good as any pure action scene in LeCarre or Deighton. If you plucked out an action scene from LeCarre and set it off by itself to stand on its own, it would look like an Adam Hall book.

Adam Hall oughta be a lot better known than he is. If all the rest of the Quiller reads are as good, this is incredible.




December 2, 2017
4 stars for sheer enjoyment of another of Hall's brilliant spy thrillers. Written in first person we are not only present, involved, in all events but always present within the mind of Quiller; including his doubts, fears, contradictions, the voice in the back of his mind calling out for survival.

Addictive. You've been warned.
Profile Image for James Varney.
443 reviews5 followers
August 22, 2024
Went back to this one after reading some negative reviews and, for my money, those naysayers are clueless. I will agree Quiller's access phase in this one is far-fetched. But the reckless act that gets Quiller crossways with The Bureau, and the chapters when he is in a remote Soviet city - those are all wonderful. The grit and tension that accompanies Quiller every day he is in Sianking, so different from a dinner jacket and a sportscar, bring an edge to Quiller novels that competing fictional spies lack. Plus, we get some great scenes with Ferris, especially his own arrival in Sianking, and he is a character whose personality plays so well off Quiller. In this case, the cover blurbs get it right - Quiller is the most remarkable survivor; Quiller is the greatest.
Profile Image for Dr Susan Turner.
375 reviews
May 22, 2022
Hall has a great way to increase tension in his writing and this one set in the eastern Soviet Union is no exception. Good to know that Quiller can negotiate his way across the planet in major jet planes and this story exposes his dislikes (parkis) as well as some weaknesses. Not my favourite so far in the series.
40 reviews
July 15, 2025
Adam Hall’s style is to drop you ahead of the narrative; explain quickly what you just missed and then drive the story forward inside the mind of a paranoid spy.

The hero’s ’professionalism’ is such he detaches himself from his own body - describing it as the organism.

It’s unusual. It works.

This one, absent of a plot other than a gets to b with zero twists is nonetheless riveting.
Profile Image for Amarylisa.
62 reviews1 follower
July 16, 2017
ควิลเลอร์ถูกส่งเข้าไปในเขตชายแดนรัสเซีย-จีน คนเดียวโดยปลอมตัวเป็นนักบินรัสเซีย เพื่อทำภารกิจ และต้องออกมาเองให้ได้ ภาพรวมอ่านแล้วเรื่อยๆนะ ความรู้สึกคือเดินเรื่องค่อนข้างช้า แต่ก็อ่านได้จนจบ ชอบตอนที่ควิลเลอร์ต้องหลบมิสไซล์ ของเครื่องบินรัสเซียแล้วก็โดดร่มออกมาก่อนเครื่องระเบิด
Profile Image for Sean.
74 reviews7 followers
November 22, 2020
Hard boiled, harder to like (not the storyline, the protagonist). Mission driven heroism... emptily. I’ll head back to a more graceful hard boil with Danny Clover in Broadway is My Beat. The golden age of radio and the golden age of saturnine souls.
Profile Image for SJ.
2,020 reviews32 followers
May 30, 2022
I had heard of the character, Quiller, before reading this. Now, I want to read another book about him. Spy vs spy at its finest.
Profile Image for Peter.
1,171 reviews46 followers
November 24, 2014
Elleston Trevor (nom de plume: Adam Hall) was a British author whose character (Quiller) is an agent (called an “executive”) for a spy agency (“The Bureau”) that so secret that "it doesn’t exist.” Quiller is an anti-Bond: he is loathe to go on missions and usually has to be duped into them; he is afraid of dogs and averse to firearms; he is dead calm in a crisis but surprisingly fragile.

“The Sinkiang Executive” is a 1978 work—-eighth in the Quiller series—-in which Quiller has just returned to London from a covert action in Turkey that went awry. He is immediately called on the carpet for the cold-blooded murder of a Russian agent who had murdered Katia, a woman with whom Quiller was involved. Quiller is fired because the act might draw attention to the Bureau, then he is exiled from London and sent to Barcelona. There he is re-employed as a “volunteer” on a one-man suicide mission in Russia, with little chance of surviving and no chance of reinstatement. How could he resist?

His mission is to fly a captured Mig-28D fighter (Foxbat) into Russia and take photographs related to a failed mission by another executive. Quiller is (of course, aren't they all?) a trained jet pilot but he has never flown a Russian jet, much less a Foxbat (there is only this one in western hands). In fact, he won’t fly this one until he takes off on the mission—-it is too valuable to risk on training flights. So we follow him through his flight training on a simulator for a similar Russian F-series jet, getting great details on the idiosyncrasies of Russian jet fighters in general and the Foxbat in particular. (Will I ever go to a cocktail party requiring this information?)

Finally, the dawn of the mission arrives and Quiller takes off in his new toy. That is when the story takes off as well. The story is told in a first person stream-of-consciousness style that accentuates the feeling of the reader’s involvement, the pace is very fast, and-—with the exception of a few over-the-top scenes—-the reader buys into the story. After a slow start, the story streaks—-just like a Foxbat.
Profile Image for cool breeze.
431 reviews22 followers
January 28, 2016
Quiller faces dismissal for killing an old enemy without authorization and is given a chance for redemption if he accepts a nearly suicidal mission. The first half of the book focuses on the use of a captured Soviet fighter jet. The flying sequences are good but the training sections are a bit slow and the whole scenario that Quiller can fly the plane so well in his first actual flight is more than a bit improbable. In the second half, Quiller is on the Soviet Chinese border with an objective that isn’t clear to him until the very end. There are some memorable scenes, one involving a bus, but the plot seems to just lurch around at times.

For some reason it seems that whenever Quiller gets seriously involved with fighter jets, the quality of the book isn’t up to the usual high standards (see also The Stryker Portfolio). Hall does a technothriller well enough, though not as well as Tom Clancy, but it seems to distract him from what is best about the Quiller series.
Profile Image for Brian Casey.
75 reviews1 follower
August 21, 2012
I read The Sinkiang Executive by Adam Hall on my vacation in Kauai.

There are no bad Quillers, but this one has always been my favorite. Quiller works for The Bureau, a cold-war covert-ops unit that only the highest members of the British Government even knows to exist. He kills a Russian tailing him in a London underground train, and is forced into a one-way mission in order to keep the job he craves.

I've read this book maybe ten or twelve times over the years, and it always holds up marvelously. It requires no suspension of disbelieve to feel that this is how things really happened back in The Cold War spy games.

http://goption.com/2011/06/sinkiang-e...
1,250 reviews
August 3, 2016
This book rates highly for details of Cold War-era spycraft; lovers of action will probably appreciate the quantity of action scenes; and a couple of the characters, including the protagonist Quiller, are psychologically interesting. However, the suspense is so overdone that it becomes boringly predictable that things will pull through at the last possible second. Also, Hall switches to run-on sentences for action scenes, which no doubt is supposed to make the prose feel more breathless, but I find just slows down my reading pace and defeats the purpose. And the episodes of the plot feel only loosely connected, with no real overall theme.
Profile Image for stormhawk.
1,384 reviews33 followers
June 24, 2012
Quiller really can do anything, even feel on occasion, which is rather unexpected given the usual cold, calculating professional that he usually presents to the world at large. I bet spy thriller writers really miss the cold war ...
Profile Image for Anna.
1,531 reviews31 followers
April 29, 2014
Thrilling plot with many intricate twists and turns as I have come to expect in Quiller books. Some lovely chase sequences.
More violence and sexual content than in many, and I am not sure the sexual content was always necessary, and in one instance it was totally illogical.
Profile Image for Colin Graham.
100 reviews
Read
February 3, 2016
I thought I recognised the name... Quiller. It was dated, but not too difficult to read.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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