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Brothers
 
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Brothers (Hardcover)

by William Goldman (Author)
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

At one point in Goldman's new book, the main character peruses the movie listings and complains about the inadequacy of most sequels. Sadly, he might have added this novel to the list. Resurrecting Scylla, the agent from Marathon Man who is the brother of Babe Levy, hero of that earlier book, Goldman offers an unbelievable story that lacks the plot cohesion and tenacious suspense of its predecessor. Believed dead, Scylla has in fact been hidden away, his face altered, his voice changed, making him the perfect killing machine. His assassin's skills honed to perfection, he is brought back into action by "Division," the mysterious agency for which he works, as part of a plan to permanently alter the balance of world nuclear power. The author spices the plot by introducing a host of super-secret weapons, among them a drug that forces compliance, a liquid that induces suicide, and an almost superhuman killer simply known as The Blonde. Goldman (Magic, Heat, Boys and Girls Together, etc.) is best at depicting nonstop action, and there is plenty to spare here, much of it wildly imaginative. But it is all window dressing, as the book's basic premise fails to hold together. 50,000 first printing; $50,000 ad/promo; Literary Guild dual main selection.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Library Journal

In this belated sequel to Marathon Man Goldman jumps several years into the future of the Levy brothers. Thomas is now a history professor at Columbia, and Scylla, the lethal secret agent left for dead in New York's Lincoln Center, has been restored and reactivated as a top-level killer by his shadowy masters in the U.S. government. In the nether world of Washington policymaking science has become a major weapon in a bizarre struggle between hawks and doves, and Scylla's assigned role is to eliminate two scientists whose invention of new creative killing methods may be more dangerous than the problem they set out to solve. The imaginative, if sometimes bizarre, plot winds its way through seemingly unconnected episodes of considerable violence before reaching an ironic conclusion which pulls all the threads together. John North, LRC, Ryerson Polytechncial Inst., Toronto
Copyright 1987 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Pathetic piece of garbage, Jan 26 2004
By Christopher Diehl (Chicago, IL) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I bought this book used, and I have to say it might have been the worst $2 I have ever spent. If you have the paperback version, you might see some of the positive reviews in the front; in fact, one reviewer even proclaims it a "masterpiece." Frankly, I don't know what book those folks were reading. If you like wooden, underdeveloped characters, an idiotic plot, pages of boring back story in the middle of an "exciting" scene, and an unexplained, shoddily-constructed, intelligence-insulting twist that would farcical if you weren't so angry that you had wasted a few hours of your life reading the previous 300 pages, then this book is for you. If it had been possible to hand out negative stars, I would have done so.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Goldman needed to buy a house..., Jan 15 2004
By "coensister" (Culver City, CA United States) - See all my reviews
...that is the only reason I can think of for resurrecting his beloved MARATHON MAN characters, completely rewriting their history, and shoving them awkwardly into a story that could have just as easily featured characters from THE PRINCESS BRIDE. Not only did he write a ridiculous book--a man creates a drug that makes a racist homophobe have sex with a black man!--he did the unforgiveable: he undid much of the power of MARATHON MAN. Turns out that tragic, shocking death in MARATHON MAN didn't even happen...Scylla's just been living on an island. Really unfair and embarrassing. Can only reccommend it on a purely camp level.
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