mikerickson reviewed The Helsinki Affair by Anna Pitoniak
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3 stars
I haven't read many spy thrillers specifically which feels like it's own distinct little niche, but this did feel similar to the ones that I have: a daring inciting incident followed by a lot of very careful plotting and scheming. Every scenario has to be gamed out in its entirety before any action can be taken... which means that by definition there isn't going to be a lot of action.
It mostly worked here though. This was helped by the fact that the plot kept jumping between the present and the late 80's, following both a woman whose intelligence career is on an upward trajectory faster than even she anticipated and her father who was also a spy with plenty of skeletons in his closet. They felt completely distinct from each other, and had their own ways of interacting with the overall theme of guilt.
The scenes where agents were …
I haven't read many spy thrillers specifically which feels like it's own distinct little niche, but this did feel similar to the ones that I have: a daring inciting incident followed by a lot of very careful plotting and scheming. Every scenario has to be gamed out in its entirety before any action can be taken... which means that by definition there isn't going to be a lot of action.
It mostly worked here though. This was helped by the fact that the plot kept jumping between the present and the late 80's, following both a woman whose intelligence career is on an upward trajectory faster than even she anticipated and her father who was also a spy with plenty of skeletons in his closet. They felt completely distinct from each other, and had their own ways of interacting with the overall theme of guilt.
The scenes where agents were meeting with contacts in the field were fun and tense, but they were also too few for my liking. The initial plotline kind of gets lost and the climax happened so early that I didn't even realize it was the climax when it happened. The ending also felt intentionally left open for a sequel or continuation of some kind, but overall this book could have been a lot worse and it was at least coherent.