Share for friends:

Puppet On A Chain (1971)

Puppet on a Chain (1971)

Book Info

Genre
Rating
3.67 of 5 Votes: 3
Your rating
ISBN
0006157513 (ISBN13: 9780006157519)
Language
English
Publisher
fontana

About book Puppet On A Chain (1971)

Well...Right now I'm in the process of re-reading my small collection of MacLean's books. Last time I read them was probably 10 years ago... They are, unfortunately, badly translated (and I want to get my hands on originals), which I see now and which is kind of distracting. But it's not that bad. Anyway, to the book at hand...I remembered "Puppet on a Chain" as a very disturbing story. I could vividly picture the three brutal deaths and it became the only MacLean's novel that I'd read only once. Not that I didn't like it, but one can deal with just as much of such stuff. This time it was similar, except the story, that I liked then, and that didn't seem so good now.To be honest, by the end I felt that it would be a very short story if it wasn't for these cartoon villain-ish types of bad guys. Normally, a character like Paul Sherman would quickly find himself in a canal with a bullet hole in the back of the head and instead the bad guys play cat and mouse with him. They catch him, play with him a bit and leave him alive to deal with him later. And tell him everything in the process. Somehow his accomplishes are punished quickly and severely but he's always given time to escape. There is, of course a little twist at the very end, but still... For a high-ranked agent, Sherman is sometimes rather out of touch.So, on one hand it's a gripping book, but on the other, the complete unlikeliness of the story gets unbearable by the end.

It was over 25 years ago when I first read that book in my language Turkish and I had fond memories. The grizzly and strange scenes of murder were still vivid in my mind. So when I saw it in a bookstore in Paris two years ago I bought it again and read it in the original language it was written. I had high hopes. I was a bit disappointed. The first person viewpoint feels a bit forced in some places. In other words some scenes in the plot seems to be planned that way just to make sure our hero sees the action. Sometimes nostalgia makes it harder to appreciate the qualities of a book objectively. So I am giving it 4 stars instead of 3 because I believe the first time readers will find it exciting and entertaining despite some of its shortcomings.

Do You like book Puppet On A Chain (1971)?

Another I read because it's set in Amsterdam. Suspense is not my preferred genre - I'm not sure why, but I've never loved the genres of suspense or mystery. So I find it difficult to get into under the best of circumstances, and with this book, I felt only a mild sense of curiosity. When the whole thing was explained at the end, that was interesting in an intellectual way, but not exactly satisfying. On another note, this is possibly one of the most sexist novels I've ever read (at least in the top 10). The main character has two young, attractive female assistants, whom he continuously talks down to, treats as inferiors and generally denigrates their intelligence. Except for the end when suddenly he's in love with one of them and wants to marry her. Sigh. The novel is in first person, so it could just be that this particular character was meant to feel that way, but it certainly didn't help me feel for him. On the other hand, the book has its funny moments - the main character is always letting others take his gun from him (mostly because he screws up) and he can be endearingly forward about his faults, which include sometimes not being very good at his job. I probably won't be reading any more Alistair MacLean novels, although HMS Ulysses has been sitting on my shelves since college, and I have to admit I'm slightly more interested now, if only to see if it's any better.
—Anne Earney

There are other Maclean books I prefer but this is a little classic. A book is forever set in its time and setting these may change but fine writing endures. So here you do not have the gadgets of Bond or the ingenuity of Bourne but in Paul Sherman you have a determined investigator who remains credible in all his efforts, in an account that carries a threat and conveys a sense of danger still to a modern day reader. There is a menace in the pages that can disturb, a beautiful backdrop of Amsterdam and its environs set against a seedy and frightening world of corruption and greed. The pleasure some seem to take in destroying human life is a chilling sensation that remains with you long after you finish the book. Perhaps it is the violence within a tourist setting that unsettles still when we are now familiar with drug related incidents and its gun crime culture in our modern cities.
—Richard

download or read online

Read Online

Write Review

(Review will shown on site after approval)

Other books by author Alistair MacLean

Other books in category Fiction