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Safe Houses: A novel von Dan Fesperman
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Safe Houses: A novel (2018. Auflage)

von Dan Fesperman (Autor)

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
14812184,641 (3.98)6
Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. Historical Fiction. HTML:

West Berlin, 1979. Helen Abell oversees the CIA's network of safe houses, rare havens for field agents and case officers amidst the dangerous milieu of a city in the grips of the Cold War. Helen's world is upended when, during her routine inspection of an agency property, she overhears a meeting between two unfamiliar people speaking a coded language that hints at shadowy realities far beyond her comprehension. Before the day is out, she witnesses a second unauthorized encounter, one that will place her in the sight lines of the most ruthless and powerful man at the agency. Her attempts to expose the dark truths about what she has witnessed will bring about repercussions that reach across decades and continents into the present day, when, in a farm town in Maryland, a young man is arrested for the double murder of his parents, and his sister takes it upon herself to find out why he did it.

.… (mehr)
Mitglied:pgchuis
Titel:Safe Houses: A novel
Autoren:Dan Fesperman (Autor)
Info:Knopf (2018), 416 pages
Sammlungen:Gelesen, aber nicht im Besitz
Bewertung:****
Tags:crime/mystery

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Safe Houses von Dan Fesperman

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This turned out to be one of the best Spy novels I have read. It was totally engrossing . Both 1979 part of the story and the 2014 part were equally exciting and I found the book extremely difficult to put down. ( )
  susannelson | Feb 22, 2024 |
What an interesting read - dual narratives, moving back and forth between 1979 -Germany CIA /Langley, VA CIA hdqtrs and then 2014, the daughter of the protagonist, and an investigator - trying to get the bottom of her mental disabled brother's complete breakdown: he shoots both his parents, and then calmly sits on front porch when authorities discover the grisly double murder. Part CIA-Cold War drama, part murder mystery investigation - compelling characters and a real twist in the last chapter... why isn't this a limited film series or a movie? Holy cow -it'd be sooo suspenseful. Have to pay attention - the narratives shift back & forth and it's a bit drawn out in the 2014 part, but still worth the read! ( )
  BDartnall | Jan 23, 2024 |
Dan Fesperman is not a new-to-me author. I have read three of his previous novels (Lie in the Dark, The Prisoner of Guantanamo, and The Amateur Spy), each of which I enjoyed because of their complicated plots and Fesperman’s writing style. But because I decided to go with the audiobook version of Safe Houses this time around, I learned something about Fesperman I probably would never have otherwise picked up on: if this man couldn’t write a lick, he could make one heck of a living narrating the audiobooks of other writers. He is so good a narrator that I had to double-check to make sure that it was really him doing the reading. The way that Fesperman changes voices, accents, gender-inflections, and the like, makes Safe Houses one of my all-time favorite audiobooks. Fesperman proves here that not only can he write a good story, he can tell a good story.

It all starts in 1979 West Berlin when Helen Abell, a 22-year-old CIA secretary/clerk who has been assigned the task of overseeing the Agency’s Berlin safe house network, in a single day overhears two conversations that greatly trouble her. Helen is only in the safehouse to make sure that things are still in order since her last visit. While upstairs checking the integrity of the recording equipment in the house, she hears two unidentifiable agents enter downstairs for a meeting that is not on the schedule she maintains for the Agency. She is mystified by what she hears – and inadvertently records – but she senses that something is very, very wrong about their conversation. A few hours later, when she returns to the safe house to erase the damning tape, Helen overhears – and witnesses – something even more personally disturbing.

Now, Helen is on the radar of a rogue CIA agent who will do anything to protect his reputation and status inside the Agency. This is a man who has a long memory, friends within the Agency who are just as ruthless as him, and all the tools he needs to eliminate anyone who threatens him. He has just about everything but a conscious. His memory is, in fact, so long that Helen will never feel safe for the rest of her life.

Flash forward to a chicken farm in present day Maryland where a young man has just been arrested for the brutal double-murder of his parents. The young man in question has been under psychiatric care most of his life, but he has never indicated a capacity for violent behavior. His sister knows that something has gone terribly, unexpectedly, wrong in her family home, and she wants to know why it happened. But when she and the investigator she hires suddenly find themselves running for their own lives, it begins to look as if she won’t live long enough to get any answers.

Bottom Line: Considering everything we’ve learned recently about the CIA and the FBI, Safe Houses is a thriller that would have seemed more farfetched in 2018 when it was published than it does today. That said, this is a solid thriller centered around three young women who decide they can no longer ignore the sordid behavior of a handful of their male colleagues. The women are willing to risk their careers and their lives to set things right – and some of them will indeed lose both. ( )
  SamSattler | Jan 21, 2020 |
This is a combination spy thriller and mystery story that alternates between two different "time zones" - Berlin in the the late 1970's, and rural Maryland in 2014. In the Berlin part of the story a young female CIA operative learns of a couple of things she shouldn't know -- a mysterious entity called "the Pond", and a senior CIA person who is very bad indeed. What happens next, and how our heroine gets into a whole lot of trouble, comprises the spy section. In the Maryland part, many years later, the CIA operative's daughter is trying to find out what happened to her mother, and why. The novel alternates between one time zone and the other, which gives it a lot of momentum and a lot of interest. The central characters are well drawn, the sense of place is evocative, and probability is not strained too dreadfully far. A good read. ( )
  annbury | Jan 20, 2020 |
A novel about CIA agents (but not exactly about espionage) set in Berlin in 1979 and the US in 2014. The main character, Helen, in the 1979 sections wasn't a particularly likeable character, and I found myself looking forward to the bits set in 2014, where her daughter Anna and the PI Henry were the protagonists.

A fairly easy read and quite fast moving, although there were a lot of characters to keep on top of. ( )
  pgchuis | Dec 21, 2018 |
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Fiction. Mystery. Thriller. Historical Fiction. HTML:

West Berlin, 1979. Helen Abell oversees the CIA's network of safe houses, rare havens for field agents and case officers amidst the dangerous milieu of a city in the grips of the Cold War. Helen's world is upended when, during her routine inspection of an agency property, she overhears a meeting between two unfamiliar people speaking a coded language that hints at shadowy realities far beyond her comprehension. Before the day is out, she witnesses a second unauthorized encounter, one that will place her in the sight lines of the most ruthless and powerful man at the agency. Her attempts to expose the dark truths about what she has witnessed will bring about repercussions that reach across decades and continents into the present day, when, in a farm town in Maryland, a young man is arrested for the double murder of his parents, and his sister takes it upon herself to find out why he did it.

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