Tuesday, 5 November 2019

Waiting for Sunrise - classy spy novel

It's 1913, and Lysander Rief, a young British actor, is in Vienna trying to find a cure for a very particular problem. He has a fiancée waiting for him at home, but unless he finds a cure, their wedding night is going to be disappointingly fraught. In the waiting room of Dr Bensimon, he meets Hettie Bull, a beautiful artist who he is immediately drawn to, and they embark upon an intense and destructive relationship that has far reaching consequences. Even though with Hettie, his particular problem seems to have cured itself, he continues his sessions with the good doctor, who is treating him with parallelism (where the subject recalls all the details of the event that led to their problem, and then creates a completely different memory of that event.) This involves Lysander keeping a journal, through which the story unfolds and we discover the root cause of his difficulty with intimacy. As Europe descends into war, Lysander finds himself being recruited into the shady world of the intelligence services, and embarks on a new career as a spy. Waiting for Sunrise, by William Boyd, is a classy novel which takes the reader down a variety of seedy paths that are the very bedrock of spydom. The characters are believable, if not always likeable, and there is a definite undercurrent of humour throughout which helps to keep the awfulness of the situation Lysander finds himself in - sometimes self-inflicted - more bearable. Boyd's books usually present a treat for the reader, and this one is no exception. Definitely recommended.

My STAR rating: FOUR.

Length: 353 print pages.
Formats: print, audio CD, ebook.
Price I paid: free - borrowed from my husband.

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