Davina Graham, a British intelligence agent assigned to debrief Soviet-defector Colonel Ivan Sasanov, falls in love with him as she carries out a mission to transport his wife and daughter to England
Evelyn Anthony was the pen name of Evelyn Bridgett Patricia Stephens Ward-Thomas,
Started her career as a writer of historical fiction, later switched to writing contemporary thrillers, often with an espionage theme.
She met Michael Ward-Thomas on a double date in The Dorchester and both were attracted to each other.] He worked for the Consolidated African Selection Trust. They switched partners and were married a few months later.
They bought Horham Hall in 1968 but found that it was costly and sold it in 1976 and moved to Naas, County Kildare where she had relatives. Increased income from her writing allowed her to buy Horham Hall back in 1982.
In 1994 she became High Sheriff of Essex, the firswt woman in over 700 years to hold this office.
In 1995 her daughter Kitty died of a heroin overdose, leading Evelyn to not write for another seven years.
In 2004 her husband died of a stroke.
She was survived by her children Susan, Anthony, Ewan, Christian and Luke as well as 16 grandchildren.
NB:Some sources give Ms Anthonys year of birth as 1926.
When you start reading a novel with mediocre expectations of a little romance and a dash of intrigue, its a lovely surprise when you're grabbed tightly and whisked away to exciting places with characters you've come to like and dislike with equal intensity. 5 stars, and happy to say I have the next 3 in the Davina Graham series lined up on my bedside table.
A pretty good spy story held back by extraneous detail and introspective. The first third or so of the book is a bit of a slog. Once you get through that, though, the alternating multi-perspective approach really works well. Makes me wish the whole book would've been like that.
Yazarin Davina Graham serisinin ilk kitabiymis bense sonrakilerden baslamistim yinede iyi oldu bunu okumam. Tipik casus gizli polis örgutleri oyunlar iki yuzlulukler buyuk ulkelerin kucuk oyunlari..
My love for Cold War suspense novels runs deep. This novel, written in the year of my birth, is inspiring me to seek out more like these. Good thing this is the first in series. I can indulge in my mid-20th century espionage fixation from the comfort of my warm, comfortable, American home all winter long—and no doubt comment again to my husband that I’m glad I am not a spy trying to infiltrate 1980’s USSR without a smart phone.
Very nicely written Cold War novel. A Russian defector, a mole in the British Secret Service, a female British agent, double cross, romance, intrigue, adventure - everything one could want in a spy thriller.
My spouse got this out of the library as an e-book in preparation for an extended trip overseas, and it was a good choice--not too terrible when it comes to excessive violence and a Soviet era story that properly portrays Russians in a way that is very much how they appear now, decades later. Davina is a spy and her family has not idea. She gets involved with one of her assets and in a series of unfortunate events, she ends up going under cover. It is also a book where it is not a 100% success, which seems to me to be all together more realistic, and I will read the next one (there are only 4, which is the major downside).
1.5 ish. Ok but farfetched; the plot felt forced and the ending was pretty terrible as far as how everything went down in the end. I couldn't find it in myself to care about the MC's out of character/idiotic romance. I did really feel for the daughter in the story but she drops out of the book toward the very end and doesn't show up again so the readers can find out how she's doing.
Really don't see how MC's boss could have let her go into Russia without speaking a word of the language on a sensitive covert operation either.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
The Cold War is nearing its end and the spy vs spy game becomes more and more complicated. This one was a little slow to get into, eventually it gets moving to a satisfying conclusion.
I read The Defector many years ago and loved it then. It most certainly holds your attention. It was if anything better the second time. I had forgotten much of the story, but it all came back “in spades!”
Fascinating story. Not only did it hold my attention, but I genuinely cared about the characters. The good characters, that is! This is. It a genre I usually read. Something about the summary drew me in and I’m glad it did.
One of the best Cold War spy thrillers I’ve read! It seems as relevant today as ever. Evelyn Anthony wrote a fantastic story full of twists, interesting characters and edge of your seat excitement. I’m looking forward to reading another!
Could not stop reading and finished it in two days. Not great literature, obviously, but exciting, well-written, and huge fun. Cannot wait to get to the next in the series!
I found the writing flat and the character development thin. There wasn’t anything in the first 100 pages that hooked me. The “why should we care about this” was missing for me.
It took me a few goes to get really started. Once I got used to the pace and writing style though, I couldn’t stop. These are real proper spy stories and I got completely sucked in! Great start to this series!
I read Albatross back in the 1980s when it was first published. At the time I had no idea it was the third book in this sequence. Mercifully I have only vague memories of the characters or story, so I’m starting fresh.
The Defector is a terrific cold war thriller. This is Anthony at her most polished.the story worked then, and it works now. Most of the characters are interesting, the setting is believable, and the pace is largely breathless in the second half.
I read this years ago and decided it was time to revisit it. It held up really well, especially with Putin in charge. As a former head of KGB, some of the scenes in this book could still be happening today. Loved it just as much this time around, as when I first read it in the early '80's.