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20th Century Ministry Of Fear
 
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20th Century Ministry Of Fear (Paperback)

by Graham Greene (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Review

Greene classed The Ministry of Fear as one of his 'entertainments', a straightforward thriller. It is far from that, in fact it is one of his strangest, most unnerving novels. During the 1942 London blitz an apparently ordinary man (who is actually a murderer) wanders into a charity fete and, taking part in a traditional fund-raising competition, successfully guesses the weight of a home-made cake. This simple action leads him into a dark labyrinth of strange and inexplicable happenings - a meeting with two refugees, a fatal stabbing, an encounter in a deserted hotel, the opening of a suitcase, and then in the weirdest chapter of all, the central character... But that would be telling. The book has all the usual Greene ingredients: strange dreams and hazy, threatening memories, shadowy malign enemies, a romance which is a kind of betrayal, and at its centre the worst fear of all - the fear of a mind giving way, a personality distorted, a reality which is actually unreal. A thriller? Yes, and an excellent one. But also a very great deal more. (Kirkus UK)

Less bizarre than Brighton Rock or Thy Labyrinthine Ways, this is a return to the straight mystery novel which in Greene's hands is always something more. Psychologically provocative, atmospherically adept, it is the story of Arthur Rowe who by chance becomes the victim of a group of Nazi agents, operating and gaining power through fear. Strange occurrences, the cake at the fair which makes him the butt of murder, a seance where another man is killed in his stead, a bombing and subsequent amnesia which lands him in a private nursing home; strange people, the private detective who disappears, a fortune teller, the Hilfes - refugee brother and sister, and an enigmatic psychiatrist. Finally, in coordination with the Yard, the webbing of fortuitous events and individuals becomes clear - and Rowe is released from a past and private guilt, the killing of his wife. Ingenious intrigue, handled with fastidious finish. (Kirkus Reviews)


Product Description

Set in the torn landscape of the Blitz, this book is a phantasmagoric study in terror. Arthur Rowe was hamstrung by guilt, the guilt of having murdered his sick wife. He was standing aside from the war until the day when he happened to guess the true weight of a cake at a charity fete.

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Creepy, but beautiful, Sep 8 2009
By Andrea (Ontario, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Ministry Of Fear (Paperback)
[Cross-posted on LibraryThing]

If I had to describe this novel in one word, it would be atmospheric. Greene sets up WWII London beautifully. There is an air of menace throughout the whole book and the descriptions of night bombings are very vivid, particularly the one in the subway tunnel. I will admit that there were times I had no idea what was going on but Greene's writing is just incredible, you can just get lost in the language even when the story is a little over your head.

Some interesting questions are raised in the novel: what is the difference between love and pity? If you kill out of love, does it still make you a murderer? Is murder really an evil thing? When is it not?

As much as you will want to keep turning the pages to find out what happens, this book is one that needs to be savoured. Read it when you have some time to think about it as you go.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Perhaps Greene's best book, a brilliant moral thriller, May 24 2004
By Ryan Harvey "Wolf Shadow" (Los Angeles, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
British author Graham Greene divided his early novels into two distinct groups: 'serious' novels, like "The End of the Affair," "Brighton Rock," and "The Power and the Glory"; and 'entertainments,' his term for his espionage and suspense thrillers. This second group includes "A Gun for Sale" (U.S. title: "This Gun for Hire"), "Stamboul Train," "The Confidential Agent"...and "The Ministry of Fear." Looking back on Greene's long career, this distinction seems very artificial and almost silly; it perhaps made market sense back then, but Greene's entertainments are every bit as serious-minded as his non-genre work. These books are in no way lightweight time-wasters. They are as concerned with character, drama, and the human condition as any of his other books. In fact, I honestly prefer his entertainments; through the mode of the thriller, they actually stab deeper into the reader's mind.

"The Ministry of Fear," published in 1943 when World War II was raging in London's skies, is perhaps Greene's finest entertainment and my personal favorite of his novels. Greene produces here a quintessential noir novel using a premise we often associate with Alfred Hitchcock's films: an innocent man accidentally stumbles upon a secret that turns him into a man marked for death and hunted by the law. However, Greene's main character, Arthur Rowe, is hardly innocent. He is a solitary, lonely individual who harbors a deep guilt over a crime he committed in the past. When he speaks the wrong phrase to a fortune-teller at a fair, he suddenly finds himself the target of a shadowy group of spies in London -- the Ministry of the title. Soon he's fleeing through blitz London, framed for murder, desperate and near-suicidal, but harboring an anger toward the people who have tried to kill him.

Suddenly, Greene pulls a massive plot switch on the reader. The novel makes an abrupt shift that alters the whole nature of the plot. Rowe's story becomes that of possible redemption and the washing away of past sins..but at the expense of feeling whole and complete. To say much more would ruin the surprises of the novel and the internal odyssey of the main character. It's one of the most fascinating moral and character-driven thrillers ever written. And the backdrop of war-torn London, facing daily rains of bombs, is astonishing. It's almost a fantasy world, albeit a horrific one.

Greene's language can sometimes feel too exact and literary for some readers' tastes -- he certainly writes nothing like today's typical churner of bestsellers -- and his peculiar 1940s British terms may cause some head-scratching for American readers. However, Greene had a magical way of expressing ideas that anyone can relate to. He writes in flashes of truth that can make the reader shiver with realization. Only the greatest authors can do this, and Greene does it over and over again in "The Ministry of Fear."

If you've only read Greene's non-genre novels, I urge you to delve into "The Ministry of Fear." It will make you wonder why Greene even bothered to divide up his books. For any lover of thrillers, espionage stories, or World War II, this book will fill all your needs and give you much more in the bargain.

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4.0 out of 5 stars A cry for help, April 12 2004
By Henry Platte (Boston, MA) - See all my reviews
The sense of dread and agony pervading this novel makes 'Crime and Punishment' seem like an upbeat self-help guide. I couldn't help but feel that this orginiated in the author; clearly, it reflects the psyche of a person who wrestled with a lot of difficult questions and who didn't always find easy answers, and it makes the smug liberalism of his later works seem all the more ridiculous. As for a more concrete description of the novel, though, I think of it as a less life-affirming 'One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest,' evoking similiar nightmares of control, full of grotesque scenes and characters, with the occasional glimpse of hope - but even the few happy moments the protagonist is offered are tinged with doubt. The immense guilt that he feels for having killed his wife in an act of mercy - I can't help but feel there's some kind of religious undertone here - can never really be erased, but the world around him is so awful that his own crime is often put in perspective.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Rowe's Struggle Is Ours
Arthur Lowe's (uh, Rowe's) struggle to quiet his life from the awful memory of his merciful killing of his dying wife because he cannot stand to see her suffer is really a low... Read more
Published on Nov 7 2001 by Mario E. Morales

4.0 out of 5 stars Not the Third Man - merely the wrong one
Greene at his most paranoid turns the war novel into something a great deal more sinister. Forget Da's Army and the spirit of the blitz and see ww2 turn into one man's own private... Read more
Published on April 24 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars The weight of the cake
Set in England during WWII, The Ministry of Fear is the story of Arthur Rowe surviving but not truly living in the shadow of what was once his life. Read more
Published on Jan 27 2000 by sean mcdevitt

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