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The Partisan: The explosive debut thriller for fans of Robert Harris and Charles Cumming

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Meanwhile, there is also tenderness and youthful romance in the chess sections of the story where English boy Michael meets Russian girl Yulia at a tournament in London. She is the daughter of Sergei (mentioned in the opening quotation), whom she knows to be somebody important, something to do with military secrets. He writes about chess in the newspapers. She and her father pretty much communicate through chess.

En toch…. blijft het verhaal boeien. Dat komt gedeeltelijk door de personages maar ook omdat je wilt weten wat er aan de hand is en of de hoofdpersonages het zullen overleven. De personages zijn voldoende tot leven gekomen en vooral Vasili blijkt diepere gronden en motieven te hebben. Zijn achtergrond en kwaliteiten zijn dusdanig dat ze de nieuwsgierigheid van de lezer vasthouden. It was unlikely that the Russians would try any thuggery in a busy London thoroughfare in broad daylight, but you never knew. In the mid-1950s two agents from what was then the Ministry of Internal Affairs had attempted to snatch her in Paris while she was walking down a shopping street much like this one. Be bold again if you want to, my little friends, she thought. I splashed your blood all over the white paving stones that day, and I will do it again.”

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I have hesitated to speak specifically of plot points because the novel conveys these much better than I ever could. I will simply conclude by saying that this is an extremely well written novel and is a must read. I recommend this book to those well acquainted with the spy/thriller/historical fiction genres and also for those who are looking to read a genuinely good book that might be out of their usual reading lists! Overall, The Partisan is a very impressive debut that bodes well for Worrall future career as a spy novelist. If Sergei had something big and he’s taken it to one of the capitalist countries, we’ve got a problem. Like suddenly the machine isn’t playing with chess pieces, it’s playing with Germany and Poland. Figuring out all the moves. What chance would our senile generals have against that?’” Now, the scene is set, fascist fanatics and lunatic Nazi's are torturing and murdering across most of the continent and beyond, but who does the author choose to become his novel's baddies? Yeah! You guessed it, THE RUSSIANS!

The story is very complex, and some patience is needed in the early stages, but Worrall steadily and skilfully knits his various strands into a compelling whole that comes together in a series of stunning finales in Spain, London and Sweden. The second half of the book is particularly suspenseful, as the twin storylines in 1961 and 1944 reach their violent conclusions and Worrall offers some unexpected final twists. These are the players, who, along with a jolly KGB-fixer type, run around over the course of the story trying to... actually, trying to explain the plot is hard... It involves the girl's father trying to leak Russian nuclear game theory strategy to the West while a pedophile sociopath Russian intelligence bigwig tries to stop him. Meanwhile, the partisan woman pops in and out throughout, as the sociopath Russian is on her list of people to kill... There's quite a lot going on -- the young man's father is also a bigwig in British intelligence, the Russian girl's mother is in Krushchev's inner circle, and the jolly KGB guy and the sociopath have a lengthy shared history, etc... It could have done with some streamlining. In the Soviet Union, if you get tired of reality, a new one will come along and replace it. Every new leader ushers in a glorious new past. Na zdrovye!’” Two young prodigies from either side of the Iron Curtain, Yulia and Michael, meet at a chess tournament in London. They don’t know it, but they are about to compete in the deadliest game ever played.Worrall slaagt er voortreffelijk in om de drie plots te verweven tot een ingenieus spionageverhaal. Hij springt tussen verschillende tijdzones en personages. Door stukje bij beetje prijs te geven van het verleden van elk personage begrijp je dat oorlog zo verschillend kan impacteren. Summer 1961: The brutal Cold War between East and West is becoming ever more perilous. Two young prodigies from either side of the Iron Curtain, Yulia and Michael, meet at a chess tournament in London. They don't know it, but they’re about to compete in the deadliest game ever played. Shadowing them is Greta, a ruthless Lithuanian resistance fighter who is hunting down some of the most dangerous men in the world. Men who are also on the radar of Vassily, perhaps the USSR's greatest spymaster. A man of cunning and influence, Vassily is Yulia's minder during her visit to the West, but even he could not foresee the consequences of her meeting Michael. When the world is accelerating towards an inevitable and catastrophic conflict, what can just four people do to prevent it? The story starts with the meeting of two young people. Yulia Forsheva, daughter of Sergei, a scientist and technologist and Anna, a powerful member of the Politburo first meets Michael, son of Sir Stephen Fitzgerald, British Director of Naval Intelligence at a chess competition in 1961. They fall in love and plan to meet again at the Chess Finals to be held in East Germany. There Michael meets Vassily, a clever and powerful Soviet spy, who is there to protect Yulia. However, he turns a blind eye so that Yulia can sneak out with Michael for an evening together. Thus, Michael has become an important pawn in a complex game of chess orchestrated by Vassily, designed to thwart Karpov’s plans for Europe. With the chess board populated with Karpov, Greta, Yulia’s parents, Michael’s father, a Cambridge academic and a cast of thugs and spies, the endgame will be played out in a stunning final showdown in Valencia. Want eenmaal iedereen zijn plaatsje kreeg in het boek, bleek het voor mij ook gemakkelijker om alles te begrijpen en te genieten van het boek. If I were to have any slight criticisms against this book they would be that sometimes the chapters jump around time periods and locations slightly too frequently (and that some may find it hard to keep up) however it does not detract from the main story. Additionally, I wish that Michael and Yulia were given slightly more time to develop as characters however this is not a major criticism as they still worked well in the way that they were written.

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