Retrato do autor

Rebecca Starford

Autor(a) de An Unlikely Spy: A Novel

13 Works 170 Membros 7 Críticas

Obras por Rebecca Starford

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female

Membros

Críticas

A good premise but something isn’t quite gel with this one. Historical fiction -spies in England in WW2. Plot took too long to get to the denouement, by which time I had lost interest.
 
Assinalado
Mercef | 1 outra crítica | Mar 30, 2024 |
Evelyn Varley has made something of herself, she thinks. It’s late 1939, and the girl from the wrong side of the tracks in Lewes, East Sussex, has come a long way since she won a scholarship to a prestigious boarding school, then Oxford, where she took Firsts in German and literature. Along the way, she befriended Sally Wesley, a girl from a wealthy family that practically adopted Evelyn, showering her with the warmth, hospitality, excursions, gifts, and spirited conversation she never received at home. And when war breaks out, Sally’s father recommends Evelyn to a friend in government, and presto! she gets a job with the War Office.

At first, that means typing and filing, nothing glamorous, and her office is situated in an old prison, to boot. But eventually, MI5 recruits her to infiltrate an organization of British Nazis. Appalled by their views, especially their violent anti-Semitism, Evelyn nevertheless steels herself to the task, unaware that she will have to choose between her conscience, loyalty to country, and her lifelong friends.

Character-driven thrillers are unusual in themselves, and this one’s terrific. Don’t be put off by the opening, a somewhat confusing section that takes place after the war. I think the author wants you to know that something shocking has happened, to hold your interest, after which the novel goes into Evelyn’s back story. It’s a prologue by another name, and I understand why Starford takes this approach, but it feels clumsy in parts, not at all like the rest of the book. The narrative sorts itself out soon enough, though, and you see how Evelyn unwittingly trains for her future career.

At her boarding school, as the poor girl, she’s the “charity case,” the butt of vicious hazing. Sally rescues her somewhat, being an outsider too, a connection I find a little hard to believe. But if it’s a false note, it’s the only one. Evelyn succeeds socially on her own where Sally doesn’t, by copying their tormentors and earning their acceptance. The price she pays is steep, however — forgetting who she is, learning her new friends’ contempt for her origins, and hiding behind a dissembling heart.

Consequently, she’s got the makeup of a perfect operative, capable of assuming a necessary guise, belonging nowhere, therefore adaptable. But once again, she pays an extortionate price for the thrill of being useful, the knowledge that she’s standing up for her beliefs, which leads her to deceive people, including herself.

What a brilliant portrayal, the better for Evelyn’s hesitations and insecurities. So often, spies in fiction have ice water for blood and seldom make mistakes, only bad bets because they’ve been misled or have no choice. Evelyn’s a different sort altogether, struggling not to engage emotionally, wondering every second if she’s overplayed her hand, and unsure what she’s accomplished, if anything. Unlike many in her trade, she shies away from damaging anyone, unaware that she’s done it despite herself. Sally’s fiancé, a handsome, thoughtless brute, thinks of pain as an “accolade,” Evelyn believes, “something to be earned, and something to be inflicted.” She despises him but has yet to learn how the manipulations she’s assigned to perform work the same way. The reader senses what she doesn’t.

Starford has a gift for active physical description that evokes feelings — there are some truly lovely passages —and she’s at her best among the British Nazis. Their rallies, riots, harangues, and even their quiet dinner parties curdle the blood. Their belief beyond all persuasion that Jews have destroyed their lives and run the world has never gone out of style, so that the historical feels like now. I can’t help think that the author has intended a tacit comparison to alt-right conspiracy theorists, no matter what human target they favor.

This chilling, moving novel, at once character-driven and a page-turner, deserves attention.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Novelhistorian | 2 outras críticas | Jan 25, 2023 |
I'm sure this is good but I didn't get into the audiobook after half an hour....
 
Assinalado
Okies | 1 outra crítica | Aug 7, 2022 |
Espionage and betrayal drive the plot of this WWII-era novel. Evelyn was born into a family of limited means, but a scholarship to a prestigious school puts her in the company of an entirely different social class and slowly, Evelyn changes, taking on the mannerisms and attitudes of her new friends. After completing a degree in German literature on the eve of war, Evelyn is recruited by MI-5 and is asked to infiltrate a group of Nazi sympathizers in London. However, Evelyn struggles to separate her own personal life and her undercover work, causing her two lives to violently collide in a way that she struggles with for years to come. Overall, a decent work of historical fiction and highly recommended to those intrigued by the espionage piece of the war.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
wagner.sarah35 | 2 outras críticas | Jun 15, 2021 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
13
Membros
170
Popularidade
#125,474
Avaliação
½ 3.3
Críticas
7
ISBN
40

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