Instead of a repeat review this week from me, Barry
Ergang is back with another all new review. After you read his review of THE TIGHTROPE MEN by Desmond Bagley make sure you check out Todd Mason's Sweet Freedom blog for the other suggestions
today.
THE TIGHTROPE MEN (1973) by Desmond
Bagley
Reviewed by Barry Ergang
When he awakens, Giles
Denison from Hampstead, England has no idea what kind of dangerous adventure
will unfold in his immediate future. Then, too, when he awakens and finds
himself in an unfamiliar room—in a hotel in Oslo, Norway—one little shock and
surprise follows another until the ultimate stunner hits him literally between
the eyes.
When he looks into a bathroom
mirror, the face he’s accustomed to seeing is not his own.
Fighting the madness he fears
is overtaking him, he says aloud, “I am Giles Denison. I am thirty-six years
old. I went to bed last night in my own home. I was a bit cut, that’s true, but
not so drunk as to be incapable. I remember
going to bed—it was just after midnight.”
Denison comes to realize that
his face, if not his mind, belongs to one Harold Feltham Meyrick, who is at
least ten years older. As matters develop, he’s pursued with apparently
homicidal intent through the Spiraltoppen, a tunnel in a Norwegian mountain (see
YouTube for videos—this is a real locale). When Carey and McCready from the
British embassy enter the picture, Denison voluntarily becomes embroiled in a
convoluted scheme to unearth buried treasures of sorts which are vital to the
Cold War while working with a group of others—a group with its own potential
dangers—as decoys to divert Russian agents who seek the same treasures. All the
while he has to try to figure out who is truly who and what he or she really
wants. Not the least of the questions he needs answers to are who Giles Denison
is—or once was—how and why and by whom he’s suddenly become caught up in this
perilous insanity, and what’s been done to him to cause emotional panic states
and blackouts when he tries to probe his own psyche for answers.
I read and very much enjoyed
quite a few of Desmond Bagley’s adventure thrillers many years ago, so it was a
pleasure to finally read this one. Bagley was a contemporary of Alistair
MacLean’s and, though he was successful, I’m not sure—I’m only guessing about
this—that he was as well known. As much as I’ve enjoyed many a MacLean novel,
my favorite among those I’ve read being Where
Eagles Dare, I like Bagley’s work even more. MacLean tended to write
lengthy descriptive passages that slowed his narratives, whereas Bagley always
managed to integrate description with action in a manner that effectively
conveyed setting without decelerating the forward movement of the story. The Tightrope Men is a case in point, a
novel whose storyline is full of surprises and twists as tortuous as the
Spiraltoppen’s are for Denison—and
for readers. This one is easy to recommend.
© 2016 Barry Ergang
Derringer Award-winner Barry
Ergang’s work has appeared in a multitude of publications, print and
electronic. You can find some of it in a variety of genres in e-book formats at
Amazon and Smashwords.
1 comment:
This is such a truly great Spy/Action novel. It starts with that truly awesome beginning, then the middle section of the book builds up the tension that is resolved in a wonderful conclusion.
Very lucky to own a copy of the original US hardcover as shown in the cover pic.
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