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Night Without End

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From the acclaimed master of action and suspense. The all time classic. 400 miles north of the Arctic Circle, an airliner crashes in the polar ice-cap. In temperatures 40 degrees below zero, six men and four women survive.
 
For the members of a remote scientific research station who rescue them, there are some sinister questions to answer – the first one being, who shot the pilot before the crash? Then, with communications cut and supplies running low, the station doctor must lead the survivors on a desperate bid to reach the coast, knowing all the while that there is a ruthless enemy in their midst, someone working to accomplish their destruction.

384 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1959

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About the author

Alistair MacLean

342 books1,199 followers
Alistair Stuart MacLean (Scottish Gaelic: Alasdair MacGill-Eain), the son of a Scots Minister, was brought up in the Scottish Highlands. In 1941, at the age of eighteen, he joined the Royal Navy; two and a half years spent aboard a cruiser were to give him the background for HMS Ulysses, his first novel, the outstanding documentary novel on the war at sea. After the war he gained an English Honours degree at Glasgow University, and became a schoolmaster. In 1983, he was awarded a D. Litt. from the same university.

Maclean is the author of twenty-nine world bestsellers and recognised as an outstanding writer in his own genre. Many of his titles have been adapted for film - The Guns of the Navarone, The Satan Bug, Force Ten from Navarone, Where Eagles Dare and Bear Island are among the most famous.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 236 reviews
Profile Image for Scott.
2,233 reviews272 followers
April 3, 2020
" . . . and I heard clearly, even above the gale, the sudden sharp sound of the [airplane] crash, the grinding tearing scream of metal being twisted and tortured out of shape. And then, abruptly, silence - a silence deep and still and ominous. The sound of wind in the darkness was no sound at all." -- page 15

Although once one of the bestselling and most popular authors of his time, Alistair MacLean's many suspense and adventure novels have fallen out of print, relegated to the racks at library fundraising sales or used book stores. In popular culture he's probably more remembered these days for those blockbuster movie versions in the 60's (Guns of Navarone, Where Eagles Dare, etc.) of his war stories.

Night Without End was a long-winded, wordy yarn about a three-man geological research team at a remote Greenland outpost intervening when a small commercial airplane crashes near their outpost. Rescuing the ten surviving occupants, the plot gets underway when the team's two-way radio set (the only means of outside communication, since this is firmly set in its published year of 1959) is mysteriously damaged beyond use. What follows then is Christie-like mystery of figuring out the perpetrator - a MacLean story hallmark, as there was usually a murderous saboteur in the mix - while also braving harsh Arctic weather on a journey to rendezvous with a military boat. It took me over a week to finish this paperback, as the characters were blandly stereotypical, and the protagonist / narrator would prattle on for paragraphs when a few punchier sentences would be more effective.
Profile Image for Sportyrod.
646 reviews71 followers
May 24, 2025
A plane crashes outside a scientific outpost on the plateau of central Greenland. Miraculously, all survive.

The scientists come to the rescue in the nick of time as it is the Arctic night and temperatures are well below freezing. It quickly becomes apparent that there is a murderer among them, making a great closed room mystery. Better still, there are no detectives. One person takes the lead. And what a well-intended tosser! He accuses them one by one and almost gets them all killed. Fortunately he has self insight and he curses his own stupidity at every turn. This made it fun and realistic. Dumb things have to happen or there’d be no story.

The freezing cold setting was excellent. The remoteness was increased after the sabotaging of crucial equipment. The pace was fast and slow with the stakes constantly rising. The characters were good and acted realistically. The mystery was hard to solve and fun trying. I was way off!

I’ve read several MacLean books, and enjoyed them so far. Some minor word reptitions like “chagrin” were unvarying but no big deal.
Profile Image for Wade Grassman.
79 reviews2 followers
May 15, 2011
When I was a lad, I very much liked Alistair MacLean novels. I was delighted to learn that they are now available on Nook. It is great to read some of his lesser known works, as opposed to “Where Eagles Dare”, “Ice Station Zebra” and “The Guns of Navarone”. My first re-introduction was “Night Without End”.

The story concerns the crashing of a commercial airliner in the middle of the Greenland tundra and the attempts of the personnel of a meteorological weather station to save them. As with most MacLean novels very little is as it seems. The crash is far from accidental and some of the passengers seem to have secrets. Agains, as with most MacLean novels, not all of the secrets deal with the plot, but it makes finding the truth that much murkier. It seems only the people without secrets are the three men at the weather station.

Unlike most MacLane novels the hero is not some super English, or American, spy; nor is he some highly trained special operations type warrior. He is just an MD working as a scientist at the top of the world. He is able to use his knowledge of the environment as a weapon against the spies in his group.

The novel is both engaging and entertaining. As the story takes place in brutal nearly unimaginable cold, it may not be altogether a bad beach book.
3 reviews
September 21, 2011
I first read this book over thirty years ago, but I remember it well.

I was eleven or twelve, and this was the first ever non children's book I read. I can remember being totally blown away. The suspense ! The drama ! An actual plot ! What had I been missing all these eleven or twelve years !

I was totally captivated and this book launched me into the world of fiction.

If I reread this soon, I may demote it from 'amazing' to 'really liked it'. But I think the warm feeling of nostalgia it gives me warrants the amazing tag. It did, after all, amaze me. I did reread it ten or so years ago, and once again before that, and it has aged well. I still enjoyed it, and the descriptions of arctic cold really had an effect. It's one of those books that will always be available on the shelf. Just seeing the spine is enough to bring a smile.
Profile Image for Neil Fulwood.
978 reviews23 followers
April 11, 2018
MacLean’s fifth novel earned him some of his best reviews, critics praising the evocative descriptive writing (the setting is the arctic) and the focused, intense narrative. It’s the first of a short run of novels written in the first person, a style which suited MacLean but which he abandoned entirely after ‘Bear Island’. The narrator in ‘Night Without End’ is a doctor at an isolated research station - one of the rare MacLean protagonists not to be an almost indestructible macho hero - who is one of the first on the scene when a jet liner inexplicably crashes nearby. Survivors are rescued and a decision made by the research staff to set off across the artic wastes to get them to safety before their meagre food supplies are exhausted. But with a high-tech MacGuffin on the plane and a couple of merciless killers among the survivors, the journey turns into a battle for survival against both the elements and enemy agents. Granted, the Cold War thrilleramics in respect of the MacGuffin are hackneyed as fuck, but MacLean has the good sense to focus instead on the gruelling journey. The result is one of his less famous works - possibly because it never got the movie treatment - but arguably his most riveting.
Profile Image for Stephanie Griffin.
935 reviews165 followers
April 3, 2022
NIGHT WITHOUT END, by Alistair MacLean, is a thrilling mystery adventure set on the icecap of Greenland. It was published in 1959 by Doubleday & Company, Inc.
Some of MacLean’s other books include THE GUNS OF NAVARONE and ICE STATION ZEBRA, which were made into movies.
The story starts out with a passenger plane crash near an International Geophysical Year (IGY) ice station. The pilots have been shot and the dozen or so live passengers are helped to the tiny station by three scientist residents in order to survive the 40 degrees below zero temperature.
Characters are varied and the head of the station, Dr. Mason, must figure out who among them killed the pilots and why. How to get the passengers to safety is another concern- the nearest help is 300 miles away. There is limited visibility, sub-zero temperatures, and a rickety tractor which can barely hold everyone.
I was surprised that one passenger was diabetic, as I didn’t think books this old would feature someone with this health issue. With short rations and no medication, it is critical to get this diabetic to civilization.
I liked the pace of the story and the intrigue of it. The pace is fast enough that there is plenty of danger. At times I thought all hope was lost. The intrigue reminds me of Agatha Christie’s books where everyone is suspicious of everyone else.
If you like 1950s action movies, you might like this book.
Profile Image for Nick Brett.
1,058 reviews68 followers
July 28, 2022
Scarily this was written the year I was born and I probably first read it in the early 70’s. So important to note this was one of the author’s earlier books and one where his craft was still being honed. And of course we have the technology of the 50’s.
A small team at a research station in bleakest Greenland are disturbed by a plane crash. Mounting a rescue in terrible conditions, they discover the crash was no accident and one of the survivors is a brutal killer. Doctor Mason must try and find the reason for the crash and discover who the killer is. Can he lead the survivors to safety or will they succumb to the conditions, or a killer?
A locked room mystery type thing where you try to work out who and why. It’s slightly light on character depth and has obviously dated, much better novels were yet to come.
Profile Image for Gary Peterson.
181 reviews5 followers
February 12, 2017
As Sluggish as a Pre-War Citroen Tractor at 40 Below

Night Without End had a lot of promise with a compelling scenario, exotic setting, and an appealing narrator. The first quarter or so of the book is page-turning and exciting. But once they set out on the tractor for the coast the book sputters and lurches along to an unsatisfying finish.

Another Fawcett author of the era, Edward S. Aarons of the Assignment saga, kept his adventure stories at a taut 150-170 pages. Maclean's novel swelled to 224 pages of small type and would have greatly benefitted from trimming 40 or so pages of blubber. And there was a lot of that, so much so that I admit to skimming a few paragraphs describing yet again the tractor's inching across the icecap, how the winds blew, or the bleak and merciless terrain. The book was padded and stretched, Maclean goosing the flailing story with a senseless killing or someone slipping down a crevasse.

To his credit, Maclean researched this story thoroughly, but to this reader's dismay, he shoehorned all that research directly into the narrative with long expository paragraphs that did not enhance the reader's enjoyment or propel the plot forward. It did provide an unintentionally funny moment, however, when Captain Hillcrest--the very model of a modern major general--radios Mason:

"'I guess you're a good way from the tractor. At 70 below you won't want to stay there too long. Suggest I do all the talking. I'll keep it brief.'" Hillcrest then launches into a half-page litany of every aircraft and ship that has joined the search, providing Mason the make, model, and national origin of each one, burying Mason under an avalanche of detail (133-34). So much for keeping it brief. Maclean didn't write that detailed list of military air and seacraft for Mason's benefit, but to impress the reader. I just felt bad Mason had to sit outside in 70-below temps while Maclean was utterly failing to impress me.

I couldn't ever accept, even for the plot's sake, that no aircraft were searching for the airplane crash survivors. Hillcrest mentioned a couple tried and failed, but with the precious missile mechanism at stake I would have thought the search would be relentless. I know from the John Wayne movie Island in the Sky that finding a few survivors in vast snow-covered wilderness is no mean feat, but in this case knowing the base camp and probable path and destination of the tractor would have narrowed the scope and made discovery likely.

Now, this will sound heartless, but I didn't give a damn about Mahler or Marie LeGarde, the two albatrosses the ragtag tractor crew haul across ice-capped hill and dale. Mahler's hovering between life and death for over a hundred pages was just boring. I felt no connection to the character. The stereotypical life story he spun, straight out of a Singer short story, was even dismissed as a lie by Mason. LeGarde gave no indication of being the star of musical stage. I expected a bombastic character, one who would be played by Shelley Winters if they ever made a movie of the book.

Besides trusty Eskimo sidekick Jackstraw (who I envisioned as Clint Walker circa Kodiak), there were no standout, sharply defined characters. None of the survivors, even Margaret Ross, whom Maclean dotes on and casts as the damsel in distress near the end, were ever more than two-dimensional. The big reveal of the bad guys was anticlimactic, though I admit to enjoying the fitting finish of the most evil one of them, as if creation itself conspired to snuff out such a foul pollutant.

Night Without End became the Book Without End, one that would have been much improved by a trimming the fat and bringing it down to a lean 150 pages.
Profile Image for Teri-K.
2,485 reviews54 followers
February 24, 2016
A passenger crashes in the Arctic night and only three researchers are near enough to help. Short of food and supplies, with critically wounded people on their hands, they begin a desperate escape to help - knowing all the time that at least one of them is a cold-blooded murderer. MacLean is excellent at writing adventure stories with interesting settings, and this one works very well. I especially liked that our hero wasn't infallible but you still had to admire him. The details of the cold, ice, weather and survival techniques felt quite real to me and added up to an excellent read that kept me breathless till the final paragraphs.
Profile Image for Bill.
1,981 reviews108 followers
November 12, 2019
One of Alistair MacLean's earliest thrillers, it's a well-paced, page-turner. Perfect setting, the frigid Greenland ice sheet, a group of scientists rush to save the passengers of a plane which has crashed on the plateau. What they find is even more surprising as some of the passengers are more than they seem. struggling to survive in sub-zero temperatures and survive a murderer in their midst, it's definitely an action packed story. Excellent stuff.
281 reviews
July 13, 2018
MacLean's best thrillers have Nazis or nature as their villains, and this page-turner's got the latter. We have a couple standard MacLean stock characters here: the hyper competent, strong silent BFF; the cardboard damsel in distress; and of course the tough, long-suffering, also competent, sometimes self-doubting leader, muddling along though we never doubt that he can pull it off. The mystery sabotagers and the reason for sabotage are just MacGuffins here, because the real story is about man vs Arctic. It's a damn good story, topped with a stone cold BAMF ending.

All in all, one of the better Alistair MacLean thrillers. It's a formula we've seen from him many times, done well and done right with good pacing and action. I finished this book in one spellbound sitting, and so I'm rounding up 4.5 stars. Highly recommended for summer reading to appreciate extreme heat.
173 reviews57 followers
September 13, 2017
দুর্দান্ত উত্তেজনা আর টানটান থ্রিল !

একটা প্লেন এক্সিডেন্ট করেছে দূর বরফের রাজ্যে, সাহায্যের একমাত্র উপায় রেডিও টি কেউ নষ্ট করে ফেলেছে !

বারজন মানুষ, খাবার আছে সাত দিনের, সাহায্য আসতে অন্তত পনের দিন !
এরই মাঝে একজন একজন করে খুন হতে চলল।!

লুকিয়ে আছে খুনি এই প্লেন-যাত্রীদের মধ্যেই !!!

রোমাঞ্চ-থ্রিল এ অসাধারণ !

:)
958 reviews5 followers
April 5, 2023
Wow

I thought I had read every one of Alistair MacLean's books, and I have never been so happy to be wrong. What. A. Ride. Wow. This story sucked me in and dragged me along like that Arctic wind the book describes. Loved the cast of characters and couldn't read fast enough.
Profile Image for Monika.
768 reviews82 followers
September 18, 2019
dobra sensacja, robi się zimno od czytania o spacerach na lodowcu!
Profile Image for Dharmabum.
118 reviews11 followers
July 10, 2019
I found this in a second-hand bookshop by the pavement, in Delhi, when I had a weekend to spend and not much else to do. I had forgotten to pickup a book from home and therefore had to break my resolve of not buying more books for a while, at least this once. And I have not the least regretted it.

This book is simply unputdownable. The plot is gripping, right from the word go. The language and style of writing lucid and a pleasure to read. To me, there was the added delight of reading about the freezing, utterly inhospitable conditions in Greenland. The suffering the characters undergo is excruciating, and yet, given my liking for the cold, I was endlessly fascinated.

Rarely do I find myself giving a 5-star rating for a book. My dad says he must have all the titles by this writer and I've seen some in our home as well. Somehow, I've never bothered to pick them up. I am now sure I will.
Profile Image for Peiman.
650 reviews201 followers
February 9, 2022
یک گروه تحقیقاتی علمی در قطب شمال در پناهگاه خودشون هستند که با شنیدن صدایی متوجه سقوط یک هواپیما در نزدیکی خودشون میشن و سریع برای کمک به سمت هواپیما راه میفتند. پروازی که چند مسافر بیشتر نداره و تمام کادر پرواز به جز مهماندار جون سالم به در نبرده اند. کم کم اعضای گروه تحقیقاتی متوجه میشن نه سقوط عادی بوده نه همه ی مسافرین و ادامه ی ماجرا...ه
تقریبا هیچ جای کتاب توضیحات اضافی و خسته کننده وجود نداره برای همین بدون خستگی توی یک ساعت میشه تمام کتاب رو خوند و داستان هم بهتون کمک میکنه که کتاب رو از دستتون پایین نگذارید تا ببینید آخرش چی میشه. داستان سرگرم کننده و جذابی داره
Profile Image for Rumaisa Shaikh.
17 reviews
May 26, 2018
I read this book when I was very young. And I think this was my first ever mature thriller. It was during the time when I was still caught up shifting from Goosebumps from R.L.Stine (written for 11-12 year olds) to Fear-street series from R.L.Stine (for 14-15 year olds-this is acc to my times, right now kids are are much smarter and probably would read heavier books than I did at a younger age than mine)
Anyway, during this time I remember going through my school library, desperate for trying out something "different". Funny as it sounds my "different" was still the same genre (thriller) but I did explore a different writer.
I still remember This book was kept on a higher shelf and it was covered with a black binding and the real cover of the book wasn't there. The front was just plain black. I read the book description and it really excited me. I have always been keen about air planes and plane crashes. So i took it home and I remember it was a heavy read for me back then but i tried my best to understand each and every word and clung on to it with my heart beating really fast until the end.
These last two years, i don't know how i got reminded of this book and just , just how much I had enjoyed reading it. Sadly i couldn't remember its name. I didn't even remember any character names. However I could very faintly recall the storyline. So i went looking for it like crazy. Searching on google about one bit of the spoiler i had vaguely remembered. I knew it was a lost cause. There was no way I could find a book I remembered nothing of except the fact that it had made me so thrilled. Just these 2 weeks back, i realized all i had been searching for were books based on a plane crash and NOT books based on a plane crash IN THE Arctic! And so off i went again. I found four books and i read their descriptions (i had already decided by then that if I did not recognize my book by reading the descriptions, then I would read all of them)
However I underestimated my memory and to my utter surprise, I straight away spotted my book from the description(it was the last one that I checked and i was quite hopeless)
I just downloaded its pdf to read it again and this is weird because I still find it as interesting. Have i not grown in all these years? Lmao i dont know!
1 review
November 13, 2017
The story is about 3 scientists who are doing an investigation on the polar ice-caps. But one night, when they are about to go to bed, they hear an airplane very close to the ground, which is unusual at the polar ice-caps. The plane then crashes and the scientist get to the rescue. They then find only 9 people on the plane. After some days they find out it wasn’t an accident and the pilot was killed. At first they suspect the stewardess but then they find out there are multiple killers. The killers turn out to be Carazinne and Smallwood. On their way to the sea Smallwood kills Levin and Johny kills Carazinne, Margriet and Smallwood then fall in a cave, which is shrinking, then Peter jumps on Smallwood, Peter and Margriet get out by using a rope, they then throw the whole rope to Smallwood so he’s stuck in the cave. After all that they get picked up by the Navy and they are all safe.

I liked reading the book because it was written from the perspective of the main character which I like a lot because then I really get to understand that one character. I didn’t really like the way of writing though because most of the really serious things didn’t feel that important, what I mean is that I didn’t get a harsh feeling at parts where I should. Like when people die, the writer should be able to give you a feeling of sadness or anger but I didn’t really get that while reading this book. The difficulty was just what I expected, not too easy but also not too difficult.

Overall, I would recommend this book, because it is just a very nice story and doesn’t take long to read at all. It’s just like watching a short film in your head.
Profile Image for Ben Fairchild.
57 reviews8 followers
April 17, 2009
This is one of books that were thrown out of our local library and brought home by my old landlord. I was too embarrassed to admit to it until now my conscience bids me confess to I accidently falling down the slippery slope of the nasty hooky plot that these trashy novels so mercilessly ensnare the reader with in the first few pages and continue to drag the hapless victim through hours and hours of miserable, sordid reading until the last page is finally attained like a prison release.
Alistair Maclean was the suburban middle class male commuter’s Agatha Christie of the 1970s; when I was growing up his latest books were trumpeted on T.V. ads.
His ‘Where Eagles Dare’ was the subject of a film featuring a young Clint Eastwood and a not so young Richard Burton and also a rocking Iron Maiden song.
Egotistical,narrow minded, mean, vindictive, self-righteous and petty in the extreme is the hero of the novel who acts out the aforementioned commuter’s fantasy. The hero often berates himself in the strongest terms allowable for not manifesting the level of analytical power necessary to have foreseen various obscure eventualities that could have foiled the plans of the miscreant who is finally psychologically tortured and left to die by the goodly hero.
What a thoroughly unpleasant experience. It’s only saving grace was to give me joy in the knowledge that I am nothing like, and have nothing to do with, the vast readership that this author enjoyed.
Profile Image for Graeme Shimmin.
Author 6 books60 followers
June 21, 2015
When an airliner crash lands in Greenland near a remote scientific base, the main scientist has to lead the survivors on a desperate march to safety through the bitter cold. When he discovers that two of the survivors were responsible for the crash, and have already murdered several people, he has to try and discover their identities before they can kill everyone and escape.

I somewhat enjoyed this arctic survival action novel with a strong mystery element. It has some well described survival/action sequences, mostly of the crew struggling through the snow and cold, desperately trying to keep their ancient tractor going, and the the twists, cliffhangers and red-herrings keep coming.

However, like all of Alistair Maclean's novels the characters are weak and stereotypical. Although Night Without End at least has a semblance of a variegated, ensemble cast.

The novel works best while it remains a whodunit. Once the perpetrators are exposed (which only seems to come after the protagonist has accused practically everyone else) and the MacGuffin responsible for their desperate scheme is identified, the final chase sequence becomes rather predictable.

Not bad if you like straightforward action-mystery-thrillers, but to my mind not as good as the authors better known military/spy thrillers.
Profile Image for Alton Motobu.
728 reviews3 followers
April 4, 2016
MacLean uses interesting techniques to make the reader really experience the story: the sub-zero temperatures, the interminable journey to reach rescue, and the unbearable suffering of the characters. There are graphic descriptions of fingers, ears, and other body parts being frozen off, and this happens to several characters. One characters literally freezes to death; one minute he is alive, the next minute he is frozen solid. But the most effective technique is the use of super-long sentences to give the feeling of events going on and on and on and on without end. There were many sentences with over 100 words, and I counted two sentences that had over 160 words. Author uses semi-colons, multiple conjunctions, and lots of adjectives to describe what is going on. This forces the reader to slow down to insure things make sense. The plot itself is better than average MacLean, but be aware of all the literary techniques he uses. This is more of a literary experience than a story.
Profile Image for Bon Tom.
856 reviews63 followers
November 6, 2017
This is my first MacLean and I can only say no wonder this man's such a legend and no wonder at least three of his works (to my knowledge) turned into legendary movies. If this book is anything of a typical representative of his opus, then his works are movies in your head. This particular book is thriller equivalent of those so called hard boiled detective novels, except for the fact nothing is boiling here. The crew is freezing their asses off from the first till the last page, to the extent I fell victim of autosuggestion and shivered at moments without reason. So it goes without saying the book is very atmospheric. There's no filler moment in it, it doesn't drag for a second. It's good fun and suspense from start to finish. I'll go so far as to coin the category: Quality Guilty pleasure (Quilty??). This one is good sample of it for sure.
Profile Image for Donna.
1,055 reviews57 followers
July 25, 2012
This scattered story about a downed airliner never quite came together for me. I enjoyed the descriptions of arctic life and travel, but it was hard to connect with or care about the characters. The narrator made a lot of bad decisions, and while that's understandable from a scientist thrown into unexpected intrigue, he didn't have to be such a smug jerk about it. That combo of self-assured cockiness and getting nearly everything wrong made him thoroughly unlikable, and so did his sudden, inappropriate romantic attachment.
Profile Image for Reader Rick.
423 reviews6 followers
October 27, 2018
Ok growing up I became a big fan of Alistair MacLean novels. Like all novelists some of their stories are better than others. NWE is one of the former. It is definitely one of my fave yarns bY MacLean. It has all the components of a 5 star rating. It is tense. It has intrigue. It has a fantastic plot. It is set in one of the most unfriendly places on the planet. Set in Greenland it truly could be called a chiller thriller. Throw in a few twists and turns a fight for survival a race with more than a few lives at stake, add a punch up and a gun fight. What more can you ask for?
Profile Image for Ruth Ann.
2,039 reviews
May 15, 2015
Riveting story of survival in at least 40 degree below zero temperatures in Greenland at the polar ice cap. A plane crashes at a scientific research station, which does not have enough space or food for the survivors.

And that's not the worst of it. A murderer is among the survivors. The pilots didn't die in the plane crash, they were shot. Now someone has destroyed the station's communication radio. A survivor with a head wound is smothered in his sleep....

Dr. Mason has to lead this group to Uplavnik, a scientific reporting station, about 200 miles away.
50 reviews1 follower
July 26, 2014
the best maclean book,notwithstanding HMS ULYSSES (see my review). this ratchets the tension up unbearably,the characters are "real" and you care what happens to them.you can feel that you really are as cold as they are in the book.one of the best books i have ever read,and that has a lot of competition,as i can read about 100-120 pages an hour,and love reading,obsessively( literally,as i have pure OCD),and i have read 1000's of books
Profile Image for Hanne.
171 reviews
January 15, 2017
Exciting until the very last. It doesn't matter that it's old. (Except for the fact that there's no epilogue. I would have liked to know how they all managed afterwards.) The odds were impossible and probably unlikely. Still, the relentless cold he describes put the shivers in my bones without a doubt.
Profile Image for Prem Aparanji.
9 reviews8 followers
December 4, 2018
One of my earliest MacLean, was a teenager then and new to spy novels. I could actually feel the cold while reading, and was caught shivering many times by my parents as well as myself. Much later when I introduced my wife to MacLean I started with this, and she had the same shivers too.
Profile Image for Mehdii.
Author 136 books26 followers
June 20, 2021
نمره واقعی : 2.5

نسخه ی فارسی خلاصه ای از کتابِ اصلی است. کتابِ اصلی حدوداً300ص است ولی ترجمه ی فارسی آن100ص. به دلیل خلاصه بودن ، تمامِ جزئیاتِ داستان حذف شده که قطعاً در اُفتِ کیفیتِ داستان تاثیر داشته.
☆نمره ی بالا مربوط به ترجمه است نه کتابِ اصلی.
5 reviews
May 6, 2011
Good thriller.... Very good story... Hard to keep away at night.... I only have a problem with the printing company... The print is very fine... Difficult for the naked eye to read...
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