The Key to Rebecca | Ken Follett | As always can not put the book down
books:
The Key to Rebecca
The Key to Rebecca
Ken Follett
NAL Trade
, 2003 - 352 pages
average customer review:
based on 46 reviews
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highly recommended
The #1 National Bestseller by the author of The Hammer of Eden
His code name: "The Sphinx." His mission: to send Rommel's advancing army the secrets that would unlock the doors to Cairo...and the ultimate Nazi triumph in the war. And in all of Cairo, only two people could stop this brilliant and ruthless Nazi master agent. One was a down-on-his-luck English officer no one would listen to. The other was a young Jewish girl...
"Brilliant...breathless high adventure."--Time
"Magnificent...pulse-racing...the runaway hit of the year."--People
* A classic bestselling thriller--now repackaged for a new generation of intrigue seekers
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The Key to Rebecca
All of the books written by Ken Follett are wonderful. and this book is wonderful. You will not be sorry if you purchase it.
As always can not put the book down
Every Ken Follett novel I have read so far has been outstanding. The
Key
to
Rebecca
is no exception. This book centers around a spy in the 1940's in Cairo named Alex Wolff. Through most of the book, all of the characters are very likeable. But keep reading, and the story takes a drastic turn. The book is fast paced. It is full of mystery, suspense, and romance. The book keeps you guessing until the end. Personally, I think this book is even better than The Eye of the Needle.
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A Strategically Shaved Belly Dancer, Desert Thieves, Secret Agents, A Camel-Abusing Nazi, And A Living Dead Jewish Girl
My title was less about offending purists and more about catching the eye with a little joke: plus it's technically all true. The fact is The
Key
To
Rebecca
is one heckuva thrilling jaunt. Set in occupied Egypt during the early part of World War Two and telling the fictionalized background story of how Rommel's best spy infiltrated Cairo and got his hands on invaluable military information the British were trying desperately to conceal, Ken Follett's second published novel has something for everyone: including, may I add, fans of strategically shaved belly dancers. By using as his code book something as innocuous as Rebecca, Daphne du Maurier best-selling novel of Cornwall, a maverick German spy sends theoretically unbreakable messages back to his comrades on the front lines, giving the Afrika Korps a seemingly inexplicable advantage over its beleaguered foes. Opposing this ruthless spy is a British officer tormented by his own personal demons, someone far less interesting than the spy he hunts, but more sympathetically comprehensible in his fallibility. Unlike most novels of this genre The Key To Rebecca, while energetic and quick moving, offers few cliffhangers or plot twists and instead relies on being driven by some of the most memorably sketched characters in fiction who stalk one another in a time and place that holds the balance of the world itself.
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The struggle to stop Rommel in the desert.
Germany has managed to sneak a spy into Cairo during the desparate struggle between the British and Rommel's Afrika Corps. Alex Wolff, the spy, is ruthless and determined to help the Germans capture Egypt. Using contacts from his depraved life in Cairo, he sets out to steal secrets from an unwitting British officer, providing Rommel with all the tools he needs to defeat the British.
Standing in his way is Major Vandam, a British Intelligence Officer, widower and father, and Elena, a beautiful young Jew he recruits to try and capture the spy. The trap is set, but their plans are complicated by the conflicting alegiences of the Egyption officials, and Elena finds herself trapped by Wolff and his depraved partner, and must somehow both survive and help Vandam stop the spy and provide the
key
to stopping Rommel.
Set against the chaos of wartime Cairo, the suspense builds as Wolff and Vandam dance around each other, each trying to gain an advantage. The story moves at a brisk pace, and full of interesting twists. However, there is a fair bit of moderately graphic, mature content, so this book might not be appropriate for less mature readers (parental guidance is strongly suggested).
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The Key to Good Reading.....Follett
Having been consumed with the masterful writing in Follett's Pillars of the Earth and World Without End, I've started revisiting all his novels. Although written over 25 years ago about a war that took place over 65 years ago, Follett's insightful characterisations hold up remarkably well. The master storyteller pulls you in and weaves a web of intrigue that will keep you involved until the final pages. Great read.
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