Friday, 22 December 2017

Kolymsky Heights - complex spy thriller

Kolymsky Heights by Lionel Davidson is a spy/thriller novel set, for the most part, in a cold and forbidding Siberia. However, this is no run of the mill spy/thriller. It is extremely detailed and complex and boy oh boy, do you need to concentrate! The action starts in the UK, when a university lecturer receives a coded message from a scientist he met many years ago. But the message isn't for him, it's for a third academic, Johnny Porter. Once he is located and persuaded to take on the mission - break into a secret underground scientific base in Siberia to meet the sender of the message - the action really gets going. Porter is descended from Canadian Inuits and is an exceptional linguist. Because of this and his physical appearance, he can pass for his ethnically similar counterparts in Siberia, making him the ideal man for the job. After a tricky entry into the country, he hides in plain sight among the locals until he can find a way to reach the base, extract the secret the scientist is so desperate to share with the world, and make his escape. There follows an epic chase to the border, and I mean epic. A very enjoyable, thrill-packed read, with so much going on that it is almost dizzying at times. The author has thrown everything at this novel, and you certainly have to suspend your disbelief more than once, as the scrapes Porter gets into and then manages to extract himself from are, at times, bonkers. Not even James Bond is that good! A lot is expected of the reader, with long and detailed passages about some of the socio-political background as well as the science involved in "the secret". But if you let yourself go, sit back and enjoy the ride, then you will have a thoroughly good time. It didn't quite get full marks from me, due to some overlong segments and, as I fear is the case with almost all spy/thrillers, the predictable nature of the female characters - all of whom, of course, found Porter totally irresistible! However, I can definitely recommend the audio edition, narrated with gusto by Peter Noble, which was gifted to me by my lovely brother-in-law.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 496 print pages.
Price I paid: FREE (a present).
Formats available: print, unabridged audio download, abridged audio cassette, ebook.

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