Ιούνιος 1941: η Ευρώπη ζει τις πιο μαύρες μέρες του πολέμου. Τίποτε δεν φαίνεται να μπορεί να σταματήσει τη νικηφόρα προέλαση του Γ' Ράιχ. Ακόμα και οι ουρανοί έχουν υποταχτεί στην παντοδυναμία του Χίτλερ. Το ένα μετά το άλλο, τα κύματα των βομβαρδιστικών που στέλνει η Αγγλία στην αντίπερα όχθη της Μάγχης καταρρίπτονται με ανεξήγητη ακρίβεια από τη Λουφτβάφε...
Σ' ένα μικρό νησί της Δανίας, ο Χάραλντ Όλουφσεν, ένας πανέξυπνος νεαρός με ταλέντο σε θέματα μηχανικής, ανακαλύπτει τυχαία μια μυστική γερμανική βάση. Ο εξοπλισμός της δεν μοιάζει με τίποτε απ' ό,τι έχει δει στη ζωή του. Κι ο Χάραλντ καταλαβαίνει πως πρέπει αμέσως να μιλήσει σε κάποιον για το εύρημά του... Καθώς οι επιτελείς του Τσόρτσιλ ετοιμάζουν τη μεγαλύτερη ώς τότε αεροπορική επιδρομή, η ανακάλυψη του Χάραλντ μπορεί ν' αλλάξει την πορεία του πολέμου. Ποιος μπορεί όμως, να τον βοηθήσει να μεταδώσει εγκαίρως την είδηση στην Αγγλία;
Η δανέζικη αντίσταση έχει αποδεκατιστεί. Ο αδερφός του ο Άρνε και η μνηστή του, αναλύτρια πληροφοριών της Μ16, βρίσκονται ήδη υπό παρακολούθηση. Ο μόνος άλλος άνθρωπος που μπορεί να εμπιστευτεί είναι η θαρραλέα αλλά εξίσου άπειρη μ' αυτόν φίλη του, η Κάρεν. Και ακόμα κι αν οι δυο τους καταφέρουν να ξεγλιστρήσουν από τον κλοιό των Ναζί και των προδοτών που σφίγγει γύρω τους, έχουν μπροστά τους ένα ανυπέρβλητο εμπόδιο: τα εξακόσια μίλια άγριας, παγωμένης θάλασσας που τους χωρίζουν από τις βρετανικές ακτές...
Ken Follett is one of the world’s most successful authors. Over 170 million copies of the 36 books he has written have been sold in over 80 countries and in 33 languages.
Born on June 5th, 1949 in Cardiff, Wales, the son of a tax inspector, Ken was educated at state schools and went on to graduate from University College, London, with an Honours degree in Philosophy – later to be made a Fellow of the College in 1995.
He started his career as a reporter, first with his hometown newspaper the South Wales Echo and then with the London Evening News. Subsequently, he worked for a small London publishing house, Everest Books, eventually becoming Deputy Managing Director.
Ken’s first major success came with the publication of Eye of the Needle in 1978. A World War II thriller set in England, this book earned him the 1979 Edgar Award for Best Novel from the Mystery Writers of America. It remains one of Ken’s most popular books.
In 1989, Ken’s epic novel about the building of a medieval cathedral, The Pillars of the Earth, was published. It reached number one on best-seller lists everywhere and was turned into a major television series produced by Ridley Scott, which aired in 2010. World Without End, the sequel to The Pillars of the Earth, proved equally popular when it was published in 2007.
Ken’s new book, The Evening and the Morning, will be published in September 2020. It is a prequel to The Pillars of the Earth and is set around the year 1,000, when Kingsbridge was an Anglo-Saxon settlement threatened by Viking invaders.
Ken has been active in numerous literacy charities and was president of Dyslexia Action for ten years. He was chair of the National Year of Reading, a joint initiative between government and businesses. He is also active in many Stevenage charities and is President of the Stevenage Community Trust and Patron of Home-Start Hertfordshire.
Ken, who loves music almost as much as he loves books, is an enthusiastic bass guitar player. He lives in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, with his wife Barbara, the former Labour Member of Parliament for Stevenage. Between them they have five children, six grandchildren and two Labradors.
The plot and kept me turning pages and reading well into the night. It started out at a good pace but the ending goes at the speed of a fast jet.
I normally don’t like books dedicating separate chapters for multiple characters. However for this one it worked because the author wove the characters through the chapters.
I love how the characters were developed. And I also like how he was not afraid to kill off a character that may have been close to our hearts. In this way it kind of reminded me of what JK Rowling it done in almost everyone of her books.
For me is a retired Air Force officer it will probably be easy to understand how I would love a story about aviation. Well I especially love this one because it took us from Churchill’s bunker in in London, a little bit of Bletchley park, and a whole lot of Denmark.
I highly recommend this book and I hope that you enjoy it as much as I did
This is the first book that I have read by Follett and it was the audio version. I did not care for the reader, and this impacted my enjoyment of the story. I found the voices used and tone annoying. The entire first half of the book I was not invested in any of the characters. In the second half I did enjoy the story more but felt it to be a rather standard war novel with no real surprises. Peter Flemming was just written too one dimensional for me and towards the end he turned creepy as if I needed more reasons to dislike him.
I start by giving this a 3.5*** rating. Not the best of work by Follett, but at the same time the man knows how to write an interesting WW2/spy thriller. This book is set in Denmark and we follow the Danish resistance as it attempts to help the RAF figure out how the Germans knew where all their planes were flying, and how most every RAF bombing run ended up with about a 50% death rate. I think it is important to realize that this was the last of Folletts WW2/Spy novels, and you can see that by the way that he telegraphed a lot of the action, but nonetheless it is was a good and very fast read. After this book he wrote Whiteout which is set in Scotland and has nothing to do with WW2 and then begins his Pillars of the Earth series and the Century Trilogy both of which series were major departures for him. Here we follow the exploits of a few members of the Danish Resistance, as well as Danish police and Nazi sympathizers who try to stop them. While there are some British involved in the action, most of this is about the Danish resistance and what they have to do to get information out of their country and over to England. If you enjoy Follett, enjoy WW2 espionage stories and a fast read then this book is for you!
The books starts very promising, as a mixture of history, suspense, mechanics and romance. The plot is ok, although it could be solved more easily. The main characters are strong enough, brave and innocent in the same time, perhaps a little bit too impetuous and careless. But as the action goes, the novels into a youngster's book, and the final is hardly credible, with fueling the plane during the flight, from a canister...
While I predicted the villain would die horribly, I would have written it so the airplane propeller cut him in half. Any Follett rates at least 4 stars.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I've read only one other book by Ken Follett. It was Pillars of the Earth and I really enjoyed reading that one. I had high expectations for this and I have to say that I wasn't disappointed. It was my first spy novel, so I don't have much to compare it to.
Honestly, it was gripping and well written. The thing I like most about it, was the fact that Follett really does a great job with leaving out the details that your imagination can fill in. Where other authors might tell you all the details of Tommy's trip to the store, Follett just makes it plain and simple. Tommy went to the store, then he came back.
Hell, he describes a really intense reunion of two lovers in half a page!!
As far as the topic of the story goes, I really enjoyed it. He really made the Nazi presence in Denmark seem very insidious. Like they were slowly creeping in on the Dane's everyday life.
The characters were fun, believable and likeable, even the antagonist, to a lesser extent. I cared when bad or good things happened to the characters, as it should be.
Fun read. Good way to spend your half hour lunch for 2-3 weeks.
The book had a library sticker on the spine that said "Adventure". It really was an adventure masquerading as a WWII thriller set mostly in occupied Denmark. It focused on Danish efforts to share critical (but nerdy) German military secrets with the British.....and of course the sadistic, collaborator police detective nemesis. There is a bit more technical information than I like, but it was entertainingly told so I have temporary mental custody of Hornet Moth flight control terms and radar detection methods. Exciting and adventurous, despite the sober wartime issues covered.
Una gran lectura de espías en la Segunda Guerra Mundial.
Los alemanes están venciendo en cada batalla aérea a la RAF y la inteligencia inglesa sospecha que cuentan con alguna tecnología que les permite prever los movimientos con bastante antelación. Por lo que Churchill activa la red de espías que colabora con la resistencia danesa para descubrir cómo lo hacen.
Los personajes son creíbles y empatizas con ellos desde el principio, con varias subtramas que muestran cómo se comportó la población danesa en la ocupación alemana y cada línea se va juntando en un final que no he podido parar de leer por la tensión, acción y buen hacer de Ken Follet.
Si te apetece una novela de espías este verano puede ser una buena opción.
În timpul ocupației naziste Danemarca încearcă să pună bazele unei mișcări de rezistență cu ajutorul Angliei. Umilință capitularii este văzută diferit de către unii care preferă să-și realizeze interesele cu ajutorul nemților. Nu o să pot niciodată să-i înțeleg pe cei care au preferat să devină colaboraționiști.
Hornet Flight is a fast-paced WWII thriller that centers on the adventures of Harald Olufson, an industrious, self-sacrificing Danish youth of eighteen, a classic Scandinavian blond with an ingrained love of tinkering with engines and getting things to work. It is this particular characteristic that drives the story forward. Harald is about to undertake a serious mission for the Allies that will have serious repercussions for the war effort. Harald must deliver sensitive photos of an ultra-secret German radar tower located on the Jutland Peninsula to England by flying a dusty, broken-down old Hornet Moth biplane across the North Sea. And all without flying lessons. Along the way, we meet many interesting, well-developed characters such as Reverend Olufson, his stern Evangelical Lutheran father, Peter Fleming, the fascist and frustrated police detective, and Hermia Mount, the courageous MI6 operative who is also in love with Harald's brother.
At times, the action is told through the point of view of Harald, other times, it is throught the lens of Peter Fleming or Hermia Mount, giving us greater insight into their characters. But there is no question that the readers are pulling for Harald, who is a hero right up to the end. The action sequences are pure Follett, riveting and breath-taking. We experience undercover police surveillances all across Denmark, police interrogations, dangerous flight sequences, and the riveting power struggles between Harald and his father, Harald and Peter, and Harald and his female counterpart, the Danish-Jewish ballerina, Karen Duchwitz. But readers are also introduced to the brave men and women of the Danish resistance, who made enormous sacrifices to undermine the Nazi invaders and the sympathizers among them.
But above all, Hornet Flight is a testimony to the bravery of ordinary citizens who fought back against Fascism and refused to back down in the face of overwhelming odds. I wholeheartedly recommend "Hornet Flight" for its superb depiction of bravery under pressure, courage under fire, and love amidst the despair of war.
Nos encontramos en medio de la segunda guerra mundial, y los británicos están sufriendo grandes bajas en su parque aéreo, más concretamente los bombarderos. Sospechando que gracias a alguna tecnología de interceptación les están causando esas bajas, una red de espías en suelo danés intentará averiguar que hay de cierto en ella.
La sinopsis como tal parece sencilla, pero la verdad es que tiene tramas separadas que se mezclan aquí y allí y que están muy bien definidas, y que en todo momento mantienen la intriga y la tensión. De Ken Follet poco se puede decir que no se haya dicho ya, y todos conocemos su forma de escribir, y aquí no es diferente.
Los personajes están muy bien diferenciados, tanto los buenos como los "malos". Quizá tengo una pega con el policía Peter Flemming, que aunque como personaje es coherente en lo que hace, sea esto bueno o malo, las resoluciones a las que llega muchas veces me parecen forzadas, casi más fruto del azar que de la labor policial que tiene que ejercer.
En definitiva, una gran lectura con un sabor clásico a las obras de espías durante la segunda guerra mundial. Realmente recomendable.
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We are in the middle of the Second World War, and the British forces are suffering heavy casualties in their air fleet, more specifically the bombers. Suspecting that thanks to some interception technology they are suffering these casualties, a network of spies on Danish soil will try to find out what is true in it.
The synopsis as such seems simple, but the truth is that it has separate plots that are mixed here and there and that are very well defined, and that at all times it maintains the intrigue and the tension. Little can be said about Ken Follet that has not already been said, and we all know his writing, and here it is no different.
The characters are very well differentiated, both the good and the "bad". Perhaps I have a problem with the policeman Peter Flemming, although as a character he is consistent in what he does, be it good or bad, the resolutions he reaches often seem forced, almost more the result of chance than of police work that have to exercise.
All in all, a great read with a classic flavor to the spy works during WWII. Really recommendable.
Solider Spionagethriller, spannend geschrieben aber die Geschichte wirkte arg konstruiert und es fehlte das gewisse Etwas, welches den Leser richtig fesselt.
I've been on a Ken Follett kick lately. He writes characters that I like, despite occasionally showing their stock-character seams. This story was especially good - Danish folks getting involved in the Resistance against Nazis, and the Danish police who are torn between doing their duty for their new bosses in funny pants or shirking responsibility. I had put off reading this because I have a hard time, in war stories, reading page upon page of descriptive on planes, trucks, guns, and the trappings of war. Fortunately, it was fine - I learned that the Hornet is mostly wood and linen (!) and didn't need to know much more to follow the story just fine. He even threw in some acknowledgment of the struggles women went through as they found themselves in the workplace promoted, for the first time, to the level of men. The book moves fast, and was the kind where whenever you find yourself with a spare moment, you want immediately to return to the world of the story. I recommend.
I'm a great fan of Ken Follet but in general, I don't like reading books set in twentieth-century wars (don't ask me why :D). But still this, I decided to read Hornet Plane because I'm a great fan of Ken Follet writing. l I have to say that the book was a great discovery for me. It's one of those books that the pages seem to turn on their own. I recommend it to fans of thrillers, spies, and course of novels set in the Second World War.
Spanish version: Soy fan de los libros de Ken Follet pero en general tengo cierto reparo en leer libros ambientados en guerras del siglo XX (no me preguntéis el porque :D). Aún así tengo que decir que el libro de Hornet Flight fue un gran descubrimiento. Es uno de esos libros que las páginas parecen pasar solas. Lo recomiendo a los fans de los thillers, los espías y claro está de novelas ambientadas en la segunda guerra mundial.
no deep, understandable characters; you hardly realised how serious the situation in Denmark was back when the Nazis occupied the Country; everybody was freakishly lucky in the end
I read this for book club at university. None of the clubbers loved it unfortunately.
Been a while since I've read any Ken Follett books. He used to be my favorite author, long before Goodreads and its input of so many others. But I'm glad I got around to this one; it had a bit of everything: history, suspense, romance, and a bit of science like radar and flying, all of which wasn't too complicated to me.
A lot of the suspense could probably have been omitted, but perhaps it added to the overall picture of how dangerous this all was. Personally, I don't think I could have handled it - I'm too much of the type to avoid dangerous situations. Fortunately, there were some who were not like me. Otherwise, it would have been a boring book, not to mention possibly an unpleasant world to live in.
It was a great book about the resistance in Denmark! It also talked about Sweden's clandestine help in the WW11!!! My Father's cousin told me how they helped people go across to Norway They were in Arvika (Varmland). Near the border to Norway! I have visited many of the locations which were in the book, also making it special! Do read if you like Spy Stories about The 2nd WW!
Not my favourite Follett but a good read at that. Story of a fledgling Danish resistance during WWII. The discovery of a German radar station on a Danish island and the transport of photos back to England.
Good characters and pace of story. Characters die all around and when you least think they will. I have some more Follett’s in my book stash which I need to dig out.
I thought this was a bit of a feel good spy thriller. I listened to it on audible. It mostly takes place in early war time Denmark. I thought the most interesting part was thinking about local law-enforcement in a country occupied by the Nazis. In this case police are actively assisting the Nazis track down Danish spies. The book doesn’t actually go much into the dynamics of this reality. The Nazis are of course easy bad guys. And two of the relatively accidental spies are young lovers. Several of the spies are presented as quite unlikely participants in this daring profession who go along with the work because it is the right thing to do in a country occupied by the bad guys. The unlikely story of a man in his late teens and a woman in her early 20s repairing a small aircraft and then flying out over the North Sea to England is just part of the heroics That you have to accept as wartime reality. Most people who die in this book die heroically be they a good guy or bad guy. I would have to say that this is a relatively mediocre book for an author who has shown significant talent in other efforts. But even a mediocre book by a good author contains some entertainment. This was not an unnecessarily long book which is an asset. The TicTock of the full moon being counted down as the culminating event in the spy drama was a little too melodramatic for my taste. And the fact that our teenager could figure out how the German radar worked was a tad beyond my gullibility. What is the true story here?
Another great historical read by Ken Follett, this tells the story of the Danish joining the Resistance against the Nazis. This is a book near the end it got so good I just couldn't put it down. Anyone who hasn't read this book and likes historical fiction about World War II, you won't be disappointed with this book.
Non il romanzo più bello di Follett (dialoghi inutili e descrizioni troppo lunghe in certe parti) ma molto avvincente e coinvolgente come sempre. E’ impossibile che Follett annoi ma questa volta non mi ha conquistata come sempre
Cautivadora narración basada en eventos históricos que pone de manifiesto algunos rasgos de la cultura danesa y honra la valentía, creatividad y fortaleza de carácter de los protagonistas. _______ Captivating storytelling based on historical events that highlights some traits of Danish culture and honors the bravery, creativity and strength of character of the protagonists.
Ken Follett is an amazing author whose research for his books are accurate to the smallest detail and make the stories believable.
Hornet Flight was a WWII book about the resistance of a few Dane’s who were able to discover secrets of the German radar technology that was causing massive loss of plane’s and life. Through the heroism of a few this technology was to be flown from a Danish Island to Britain by way of a broken down Hornet Moth airplane that was quickly repaired by one of these heroes.
The characters and plot were gradually revealed in an edge of the seat manner. When it was time for the heroic flight to take place I was all in for a rating of 5 stars.
This is a book that takes place in occupied Denmark during World War 2 in 1941 and involves a German radar station and a network of spies trying to get the warning to the British. The British are losing a high percentage of bombers, and it’s almost as though the Germans know where they’re going to be. It is thought that the Germans’ progress on developing radar can’t be the explanation, but a young Dane discovers otherwise. Getting the info into Allied hands proves to be dicey, because the young man’s nemesis – a Danish cop bent on advancing his career by unravelling the spy ring – is pretty capable of using the clues to identify his co-conspirators. The best part of this book is that the cop is a somewhat sympathetic figure for a protagonist. He has been the victim of a professional exclusion that bypassed a promotion he had hoped for, and he cares for his wife that suffered permanent brain damage from a drunk driver, so he has characteristics that make him seem like a noble guy, but he is working for the Nazis in an attempt to change his professional circumstances, and that (combined with his effectiveness at uncovering those trying to help the Allies’ cause) makes him the bad guy of the book, but for the first ½ of the book, it’s hard not to have some respect for him until he lets his duty get the better of him. The protagonist is also an intriguing person, a resourceful young man who rigs his motorcycle to work using peat as fuel. He and a classmate’s sister fix an old de Havilland Hornet Moth aircraft to smuggle the vital information to England, thus giving the novel its name, but will they be able to get away before the Danish cops and the German army stationed nearby catch on? An excellent novel – although sometimes a bit unrealistic – that keeps you guessing, and with plenty of things that don’t go the way the reader would hope that they do, and I enjoyed it from beginning to end.