A brilliantly atmospheric thriller for fans of Len Deighton and Jack Higgins.Even at the height of Nazi Germany's power there was one invasion Hitler will not risk - the invasion of England by his crack stormtroopers. But the sworn followers of Max von Bayer are a desperate group of seven men and women who are prepared to defy the Führer's ultimate authority and face almost certain death. Driven by personal passions and inspired by their fervent loyalty to the Nazi creed, they land on the shores of England and take the war into their own hands.Their aim is to show that a German invasion is possible, that Britain could be attacked and forced to send out Codeword Cromwell.'Truly a classic writer of espionage fiction' - Len Deighton, author of SS-GB
1917 - 2005. Also wrote under the pseudonyms Richard Butler and Patrick Kelly.
Ted Allbeury was a lieutenant-colonel in the Intelligence Corps during World War II, and later a successful executive in the fields of marketing, advertising and radio. He began his writing career in the early 1970s and became well known for his espionage novels, but also published one highly-praised general novel, THE CHOICE, and a short story collection, OTHER KINDS OF TREASON. His novels have been published in twenty-three languages, including Russian. He died on 4th December 2005.
This is a rather bland story, despite its bleak ending; for the reader's luck, the novel is short and as usual well written so getting to the last page is not a big effort. But the story has problems of plausibility plus it is not very thrilling.
Ted Allbeury was an extremely prolific writer with an impressive production of 44 novels; most of them are classic cold war espionage thrillers plus a few SOE stories. The quality of his books was somewhat volatile, sort of hit-and-miss, which is probably what made of him an overall under-rated genre author. Those willing to dig into his vast production can be rewarded with a handful of gems and a couple of golden nuggets. At the bottom of this review, my personal guide into the Allbeury "mine".
Outstanding Seeds Of Treason
Very good Wilderness Of Mirrors The Other Side Of Silence A Time Without Shadows The Dangerous Edge Moscow Quadrille Lonely Margins Shadow Os A Doubt The Lune-Crosser Beyond The Silence The Only Good German The Special Collection
Average The Twentieth Of January The Crossing The Lantern Network Shadow Of Shadows Palomino Blonde As Time Goes By
Can Skip Snowball Pay Any Price Show Me A Hero Deep Purple No Place To Hide The Girl From Addis The Long Run
Boy this is one bleak book. Like most Allbeury novels, it is set in the Second World but doesn't then leap forward to the Cold War. Our protagonist is Max von Bayer, a rich equestrian who falls for a young British girl who also happens to be Jewish. When war breaks out he puts together a team to cross the Channel and cause havoc - he's upset that the German armed services have stifled Adolf's plans for invasion.
I almost found myself rooting for this band of misfit saboteurs. The finale is devastating and at 186 pages there's not an ounce of fat on this book. The romance element added a certain poignancy and I enjoyed the author's take on the opening rounds of the war eg. how the Blitz came about by accident. Did Roosevelt really issue a secret ultimatum to Hitler that any invasion of Britain would result in a US declaration of war? Sometimes difficult to tell where the history ends and the fiction begins.
The usual competent thriller but it felt a bit flat somehow, lacking the action of say "The Eagle Has Landed".