Nerd Picnic reviewed A hero of France by Alan Furst
Review of 'A hero of France' on 'Goodreads'
2 stars
I've read all the Night Soldiers books (I think), so clearly I'm fine with the formula of a middle-aged man engaging in espionage or resistance in or around Paris during WWII, with drinks at the Brasserie Heininger, S. Kolb, a little sex and violence, etc. A Hero of France fits well with the series, but there were a couple odd things that made it a half-step below the other books:
1) One character was introduced twice, with nearly identical descriptions. Maybe Furst was just trying to help the reader keep all the characters straight, but it seemed more like a mistake in the editing.
2) The expository dialogue was not as natural and smooth as we would expect from Furst, especially from the fugitive RAF pilot near the beginning. If this book were a movie, I'd expect the character to look right into the camera and say "everybody got that? …
I've read all the Night Soldiers books (I think), so clearly I'm fine with the formula of a middle-aged man engaging in espionage or resistance in or around Paris during WWII, with drinks at the Brasserie Heininger, S. Kolb, a little sex and violence, etc. A Hero of France fits well with the series, but there were a couple odd things that made it a half-step below the other books:
1) One character was introduced twice, with nearly identical descriptions. Maybe Furst was just trying to help the reader keep all the characters straight, but it seemed more like a mistake in the editing.
2) The expository dialogue was not as natural and smooth as we would expect from Furst, especially from the fugitive RAF pilot near the beginning. If this book were a movie, I'd expect the character to look right into the camera and say "everybody got that? are we clear?"
3) The climax of the action, where the Nazi counterintelligence antagonist closes in on our hero(es), was much weaker here than in the other novels. Not much tension.
On the bright side, the city detail is great as always. The economic effects of the Occupation are highlighted. Max de Lyon, the owner of Le Cygne nightclub, has a bigger role than usual. Overall, not a bad book at all, but Furst has done better.