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Warren Kiefer

Autor von Outlaw

8 Werke 90 Mitglieder 3 Rezensionen

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Beinhaltet die Namen: Warren Keifer, Kiefer Warren

Werke von Warren Kiefer

Outlaw (1989) 39 Exemplare
The Lingala code (1972) 19 Exemplare
The Pontius Pilate papers (1976) 18 Exemplare
The Stanton Succession (1992) 7 Exemplare
Castle of the living dead (1964) 4 Exemplare
The kidnappers (1977) 1 Exemplar
Perpignon Exchange (1990) 1 Exemplar

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In my project of reading all the Edgar winners for Best Novel (in chronological order), I've reached 1973. (The Edgars are awarded in May each year for books published the preceding year, so this book came out in 1972.) It's interesting how many of the winners in the 60s and early 70s dealt in some way with espionage. [book: The Lingala Code] is one of those.
Author Warren Kiefer is a bit mysterious himself. Under the name of Lorenzo Sabatini, he directed Castle of the Living Dead, which gave Donald Sutherland his first big break and resulted in Sutherland's naming his son Kiefer. He directed and wrote screenplays for several other forgettable movies, and wrote 5 more novels after this one. It's tempting to think that he may have been a CIA agent like his protagonist, since there is so little information available about him.
The Lingala Code is set in what was then (the book is set in the early 60s) known as Congo-Leopoldville; earlier the Belgian Congo, later Zaire, and now the Democratic Republic of Congo. At the time the book takes place, the Belgians have departed, Katanga Province has seceded, and all is in flux. Michel Vernon, a French-speaking CIA agent, is attached to the US Embassy in Leopoldville (now Kinshasa) as is his dearest friend, an air attache. When the friend is killed in what appears to be a robbery attempt, Vernon is suspicious and begins his own investigation.
The book is a story about a murder, but it is also about espionage, cultures clashing, the birth pangs of a new African nation emerging from colonialism, and even a little romance. Kiefer tells all these stories very well, keeping the reader guessing until the last pages.
A major theme in the book is that in Congo, things which at first appear normal and straightforward are really anything but. This is brought out not only in major plot elements but also in atmospheric asides, such as the descriptions of a beauty pageant of prostitutes and Sunday afternoon zoo outings where parents and children enjoy taunting and teasing the starving animals.
It was not easy to lay hands on this book despite its award-winning status. You may have to go to interlibrary loan or pay $17 for a used copy online. Still, highly recommended.
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auntieknickers | Apr 3, 2013 |
Outlaw is the story of Lee Garland, who begins life in New Mexico orphaned after the local Apache Indians raid his parents farm. He is raised by a neighboring Mexican family, becomes something of an outlaw, rustles cattle, joins Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders in their charge up San Juan Hill, becomes something of a oil baron and eventually Ambassador to Mexico. He lives to consider voting for Nixon which he refuses to do.
½
 
Gekennzeichnet
CBJames | 1 weitere Rezension | Jul 17, 2011 |
Lee Garland's parents are massacred by Apaches and he is raised by a Mexican family in New Mexico. When he grows up he becomes a cattle rustler wanted for murder, a soldier that is part of Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders where he gets a medal for his part at San Juan Hill, a sucessful banker, an oil well driller that helps to discover oil first in Tampico in Mexico and then again in the great Permain Basin field in New Mexico and West Texas, a soldier with General Pershing when he went into Mexico looking for Pancho Villa (who Lee had already had confrontations with twice before this), to France during the first World War where General Pershing again needs him, to President Hardings administration where he is part of the Teapot Dome scandal, to........ you get the idea. Lee was in just about everything that happened between the 1890's and World War II. The book could have easily been called Forrest Gump Goes Out West.

Some of the action sequences are well written - the Rough Riders in Cuba, the oil fields in Mexico - but what passes for a love story is pure, unadulturated soap opera. Written for men, but soap opera just the same. The ending is a Ruby Ridge type sequence where Lee is in a stand off with the US government. What was very believable writing in Cuba and Mexico is painfully missing at the end.
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½
 
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markatread | 1 weitere Rezension | Sep 7, 2010 |

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Werke
8
Mitglieder
90
Beliebtheit
#205,795
Bewertung
½ 3.4
Rezensionen
3
ISBNs
11

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