Sansom is not strong on good memorable book titles but he’s strong on writing style.
For too many decades, there was a ‘pact of forgetting’
concerning the Spanish Civil War atrocities, not least the forced abduction of
thousands of children of Republicans; this book is dedicated to their memory.
Shell-shocked survivor of Dunkirk , Harry Brett volunteers to become a
spy for the Secret Service. The spymasters believe that Harry might prove
useful as he knows from his school-days a shady English businessman, Sandy
Forsyth, who seems to have the ear of powerful men in Madrid .
Bernie Piper is another of Harry’s old school acquaintances.
Communist supporting Piper went missing during the war in 1937. Bernie’s girlfriend Barbara Clare had been a
Red Cross nurse but she’s now married to Forsyth and is barely coping with the
children in the state orphanages. Then
Barbara discovers that Bernie might not be dead, but working in a secret labour
camp in the mountains.
The scene is set for several character threads to be
intertwined in the traumatised city; indeed, the city itself is almost a
living, breathing character thanks to Sansom’s ability to evoke a place and
time.
The walls of Madrid
had ears after the war. Neighbour against neighbour. It only took a few words
of denunciation to have you carted off to a labour camp or even shot. Harry found love with the tragic Sofia,
another victim of the war. He also helped Barbara search for her ex-lover
Bernie while she deceived her husband Sandy. And Sandy was not above deception either.
Every character, no matter how minor, rings true in this
book. You feel what they feel. The action scenes are few but they’re depicted
with great verve and you’re there with the protagonists, so vital is the
writing.
Sansom captures the deprivation and ugliness of modern
post-war urban living. It’s squalid and grim, especially in winter. This is an
authoritative piece of writing, combining the elements of a thriller, a romance
and an historical drama. The political
chicanery, the ideological imperatives and the treacherous double-crosses seem
very believable in Sansom’s hands.
These 500-odd pages are turned very quickly because you want to know what happens next and the last few chapters are tense and suspenseful. After any conflict, there are survivors and they carry the scars for the rest of their lives. The surviving characters in this book are scarred by politicians as much as the violent men with guns. Masterful writing.
Note. Sansom has enjoyed success with his historical tales about Matthew Shardlake in Tudor times. Recently, he published his alternative history novel Dominion, set in 1952, with the Nazis in power in Britain.
***
The short story 'Grave Concerns' featured in the above Spanish Eye collection
is about the 'pact of forgetting' and its tragic consequences today
Spanish Eye paperback can be purchased post-free worldwide here
Kindle e-book from Amazon.co.uk here
Kindle e-book from Amazon.com here
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