WW II Spy Novels discussion
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Robert Ludlum
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Oh that Ludlum. He was indeed verbose. You're right.
His plots were extraordinary though--multi-layered; twists'n'turns galore.
I've said before on Goodreads that everyone who jumped on the Ludlum bandwagon once 'Bourne Identity' became a hit, should be ashamed. Ludlum wrote the same caliber of crackerjack thriller for years...years before 'Bourne' and no one paid him any attention.
Bravo Mike. Yes, a lot of his early work is WWII related. 'Holcroft Covenant', etc
His plots were extraordinary though--multi-layered; twists'n'turns galore.
I've said before on Goodreads that everyone who jumped on the Ludlum bandwagon once 'Bourne Identity' became a hit, should be ashamed. Ludlum wrote the same caliber of crackerjack thriller for years...years before 'Bourne' and no one paid him any attention.
Bravo Mike. Yes, a lot of his early work is WWII related. 'Holcroft Covenant', etc

Yep read it in the seventies and enoyed it pretty good, then read a few more of his books after that. Started into Forysth about the same time.

Thanks. I'll pick up "Holcroft" on my next trip to the library.

I found them high-rate of absorbtion page-turners, but yes they were pretty thick page-counts too. The guy was a workhorse. He sure cranked 'em out.

I would have to agree. I found my reading speed was less rapid than normal (which means it was pathetic) with Ludlum, so the book lasted a long time. But a true page turner. I was reading about 50 to 75 pages per sitting which required a lot of time and concentration (for me), but speaks to the exceptional quality of the story itself.


I have "Holcroft Covenant" now, but there's about 10 books ahead of it. I'll post a comment here when I finish it.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Rhinemann Exchange (other topics)The Rhinemann Exchange (other topics)
Anyone else read the book? Did you like it or not? I liked it.
Any other Ludlum books to recommend with WWII counterintelligence as the centerpiece?