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Charles Pol #1

The Tale of the Lazy Dog

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Charles Pol returns in a high-octane heist thriller! Perfect for fans of Len Deighton, John Le Carre, Tom Clancy and Ian Fleming.

Get rich or die trying…


1969, Southeast Asia


Irish journalist Murray Wilde travelled to Southeast Asia for some rest and recuperation.

But when he meets the charming and persuasive Frenchman Charles Pol in Cambodia, he agrees to take part in a risky smuggling operation.

Taking advantage of the American troops dropping food packages into the areas of Vietnam devastated by the ongoing war, Murray volunteers to take part in an aerial ‘rice-drop’ – using it to plan his own illegal heist.

But this billion-dollar plot can’t be undertaken by Murray alone – especially when he is surrounded by American CIA agents.

He enlists the help of Sammy Ryderbeit – a vigilante pilot with a troubling past, and he must trust the information he is being fed by Charles Pol.

But when people around him start dying, Murray begins to question everything. How much is he willing to gamble when his own life is at stake?

THE TALE OF THE LAZY DOG is the second classic terrorist adventure novel in the Charles Pol espionage thriller series: action-packed international thrillers, full of twists and turns.

'the natural successor to Ian Fleming' - Books and Bookmen

'A brilliant thriller to the last shattering paragraph. A must' - Sunday Mirror

'Superbly exciting' - Eric Ambler

'remarkably accomplished ... very little this good is being written today' - Shots Mag

'a brilliant heist thriller' - Mike Ripley

THE CHARLES POL ESPIONAGE THRILLER SERIES:
Book One: Barbouze
Book Two: The Tale of the Lazy Dog
Book Three: Gentleman Traitor

342 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1970

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About the author

Alan Williams

256 books8 followers
Alan Emlyn Williams was a journalist and foreign correspondent, reporting from notable hotspots worldwide including Hungary in 1956, Algeria, Vietnam and Northern Ireland. In 1962 he started writing thrillers which brought him the accolade "the natural heir to Ian Fleming" but it was his well-researched spy stories such as The Beria Papers and Gentleman Traitor (which featured real life traitor Kim Philby) which brought him international success.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Paul Cornelius.
1,041 reviews42 followers
November 18, 2024
Two novels in and Alan Williams looks to be quite a good adventure writer. I skipped ahead in the Charles Pol series, because I saw that The Tale of the Lazy Dog was set in Southeast Asia, and I was eager to see how Williams treated the region. In fact, more than half the action takes place in Laos, with a bit in Bangkok, and the rest in South Vietnam and Cambodia. And, clearly, Williams spent time, here. I see from his biography, he covered the Vietnam War as well as wars in Algeria, the Middle East, Africa, and Rhodesia. The Rhodesian/South African connection is important, because one of Williams's most vivid characters in Lazy Dog is Sammy Ryderbeit, the South African Jewish mercenary who appeared in Snake Water. That novel is not part of the Charles Pol series, but it has many similarities with Lazy Dog besides the presence of Ryderbeit. Both plots focus on a "treasure hunt" of sorts, diamonds in Snake Water and a US$1.5 billion cash heist from Saigon in Lazy Dog. Both also feature a cold-hearted, somewhat treacherous love interest who can only be counted on to see to her own self interest.

As I say, Williams obviously had been to the region. The fliers in Lazy Dog work for Air USA. I don't know why he didn't just come out and call it what it was, Air America, the CIA operated airline, which conducted much of the Secret War in Laos during the 1960s and 1970s. Williams describes Air America's operations fairly accurately (I happen to know a great deal about this particular subject). He's even aware of the White Rose in Vientiane, although his description of the building is a bit off. Good stuff about how the "kickers" worked and the aircraft. Even if he doesn't mention the Pilatus Porter or Helio Courier, he gives accurate summaries of the characteristics of the Caribou and DC6. Only somebody who went on missions carrying "soft rice" and "hard rice" could have given the descriptions Williams does in a 1970 novel.

Really enjoyable and good reading, this. There aren't many novels set in Laos during the postwar era. Only Norman Lewis's A Single Pilgrim comes immediately to mind. And that was set when Laos was still officially French Indochina. Oh, and the novel ends with a surprise. A big one. Can't wait to get to the third in the series, Gentleman Traitor. But first I need to go back and read the first one, Barbouze.
Profile Image for Paul Ataua.
2,190 reviews288 followers
January 24, 2025
Irish journalist Murray Wilde gets involved with the mysterious and dangerous Frenchman Charles Pol in a major heist involving billions of American dollars. Things seem to be going to plan until the people around Wilde start dying. This was my first Alan Williams and I was surprised by how good it was. It has its share of interesting characters, none more interesting than the mysterious Charles Poll, and it has pace, a pace builds as the story progresses towards its high octane conclusion. It’s good to read a book that took place in the part of the world I live in and gives a fairly good description of how things were around that time. More Alan Williams for me in the future.
Profile Image for Ruth.
4,710 reviews
July 30, 2011
"""With friends like these...... Murray cut him short:˜All right, I'll take your word for it. But for a moment you had me worried. I thought it was you who'd killed Finalyson. Pol sat back with his champagne and chuckled playfully. ˜Oh but it was, my dear Murray. Or rather, I had him killed. It was the only way." Murray closed his eyes. It was not easy to lose one's temper with a man while you drank his champagne. Especially when he also had a gun."
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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