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Browse: Home / Jim Harris / Page 3

Jim Harris

Sep

30

2019

Spies of No Country: Secret Lives at the Birth of Israel

Spies of No Country by Matti Friedman

I first came across author Matti Friedman in 2016 when he spoke at a venue in Seattle, WA. At that event, I purchased a copy of The Aleppo Codex. I next came across Matti in Tucson AZ at the Tucson Festival of Books in March of 2019, where he was promoting Spies of No Country. …

Aug

15

2019

Jade Lady Burning

Jade Lady Burning by Martin Limon

Over the years, while browsing for books to read, the name of Martin Limon kept popping up, but I paid no attention to the recommendations. I now regret those decisions. I attended the Tucson Festival of Books in March 2019, where I had a chance to hear Mr. Limon speak during a session of a mystery writers’ …

Aug

1

2019

The Expats book cover by Chris Pavone

The Expats by Chris Pavone

This book was recommended to me by a trusted source. The source was right. I was not familiar with the writings of Chris Pavone, but now I am a fan. The Expats is set in Luxembourg, primarily, but takes the reader to Paris, Geneva, New York City and Washington, D.C. The primary “good guys” are …

Jun

27

2019

Warburg in Rome

Warburg in Rome by James Carroll

A trusted source recommended Warburg in Rome to me. The author is James Carroll, who is Catholic. I mention that because I think it is important when reading this story. The setting is primarily the city of Rome just after the WWII Allies liberated that city in 1944. The story also moves to other parts …

May

9

2019

At the Table of Wolves

At the Table of Wolves by Kay Kenyon

You have heard the cliché “Never judge a book by its cover!” Thank goodness I did. I saw the cover at a recent writers conference. It had a couple of icons that I recognized– Big Ben in London, WWII aircraft and a woman dressed as a WWII spy. In the cover copy, I saw the …

Feb

20

2019

The Fox

The Fox by Frederick Forsyth

Thank you, Frederick Forsyth, for writing The Fox. Thank you G.P. Putnam’s Sons for publishing it. The 21st century has seen the birth of a new type warfare– cyberwarfare. Mr. Forsyth has produced a book whose plot seems to be ripped from major news headlines (not “fake news!”). Among the major characters is Sir Adrian Weston, retired …

Jan

31

2019

The Daughter of Time

The Daughter of Time and The Man in the Queue by Josephine Tey

I first read a Josephine Tey book in 1962 and it changed my life. I became a huge fan of British history especially in the period from King Arthur to Richard III. I took a tour of the Tower of London castle/prison in August 1962. It was just before I began my junior year in …

Jan

16

2019

Season of Sacrifice

Season of Sacrifice by Bharti Kirchner

I have been a book professional since 1974. In the course of my career, I have met many authors. Some have become friends. Bharti Kirchner is one. I try not to let friendship get in the way of honest reviews. Ms Kirchner has written several books in the fields of cooking and fiction. Season of Sacrifice is the first …

Oct

4

2018

2

remarks

Cafe Budapest

Cafe Budapest by Peter Curtis

About a year ago, I read The Dragontail Buttonhole, the first book in a trilogy by Peter Curtis, in which he details his family’s flight from Prague after the Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1939. That story read like the best spy fiction of that period of infamy. Peter has followed that story with Cafe Budapest. After an unbelievable trek …

Sep

13

2018

1

remark

The Iceman

The Iceman by P. T. Deutermann

Many thanks to St. Martin’s Press for an advanced reading copy of P.T. Deutermann’s newest WWII military thriller, The Iceman. This is the 4th of Mr. Deutermann’s standalone WWII novels I have read. The previous books include Pacific Glory, Ghosts of Bundo Suida, and The Commodore. They all are about different ship’s captains facing primarily Japanese opponents during the …

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