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The Color of Night
 
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The Color of Night (Hardcover)

by David Lindsey (Author)
3.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 47.00
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Product Description

From Kirkus Reviews

An engrossing thriller about autumnal Cold Warriors. Harry Strand, erstwhile super spy, has been in from the cold for five solid years. The art dealer's world, once his cover, is now his reality. Though still in a kind of half mourning for his wifekilled 11 months earlier in an automobile collisionhe is reasonably content, at least as content as melancholy Harry ever expects to be. His routines, his business, and his select company of friends solace and comfort him so that, in all, its a manageable life. But enter Mara Song, a gorgeous Chinese- American divorce with a collection of valuable drawings she wants him to sell for her. Before he knows it, Harry is head over heels. But just who is this remarkably attractive person? Is she at all who she purports to be? The question intensifies when Harry finds a certain shocking videocassette in her room detailing an auto smash-up, the very one that cost him his wife. And, clearly, what Harry had always supposed was an accident was anything but. Harry, though, convinces himself that Mara is true-blue and the cassette a plant. And almost instantly, he realizes who must have planted it. The implications are disruptive and scary: a deadly secret, which hed long felt was safely buried, has been disinterred by a powerful enemy whos no longer a sleeping dog. Once duped by Harry, he now seeks retributionon Harry and on the group of intelligence agents Harry once ran. What it comes down to, Harry grimly decides as one former ally after another is isolated and brutally dealt with, is kill or be killed. Lindsey (Requiem For a Glass Heart, 1996, etc.) is in that army of thriller writers who are regularly measured against le Carr. And hes one of the few who consistently bears up. -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.


Product Description

Former intelligence officer Harry Strand learns that a secret agent can never retire--and never surrender. A widower, he has started his life over and fallen in love with Mara Song, a beautiful Asian art collector. But Harry's peaceful world is shattered when he discovers a shocking videotape of his wife's death in Mara's tape collection.

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Customer Reviews

20 Reviews
5 star:
 (6)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.1 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
5.0 out of 5 stars Lindsay Scores ANOTHER Winner, Nov 26 2003
By Avid Reader (Franklin, Tn) - See all my reviews
I do not understand the reviews that praise plots, character development, writing style and intelligence then reward a 3 or 4. Lindsay has to be one of the best kept secrets in modern American literature. His stories are without exception deft, deep and dramatic and the characters are so utterly REAL - with hidden sorrows, unforgiven deeds and hosts of other problems. Yet they all strive for love and completeness.

As usual the research complements the story. I knew next to nothing about the business side of collecting drawings - or the drawing world in general for that matter. But the way he weaves this world with his "other" plot is superb. His heroes (he is a man's writer) are uniformly suave, masculine, Thomas Crownes with angst. Our apparently relaxed and successful collector is of course not what he appears but instead is a former spy.

In a Ten Little Indians reference, all members of his team are being murdered one by one. He meets a beautiful woman who may or may not be all she seems and in the end there is an act of revenge that literally stuns. Mara and Strand are the perfect couple in Lindsay's universe. Teir sophistication, panache and verbal foreplay are the stuff of great movies and great novels. A great read!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Sometimes Revenge is Just, Sometimes it's Just Revenge, Nov 11 2003
By Sara Hackett (from the Darkside) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Harry Strand has long since retired from American intelligence. He meets lovely Mara Song, thinks it's love, then one day he plays one of her videos and sees his wife's last moments on the screen. Her car is forced off the road and all he can do is watch.

It's not long before he realizes that the two sides, who he ripped off vast funds from, are out to get him. Because during the forgotten cold war, when he was supposed to be channeling American monies to anti-communist criminals he was actually founding his own charitable foundation and trust fund. Harry has made some nasty enemies. But does he want them off his back, or does he want to make them pay?

It must have been hard for the writers of secret agent fiction to deal with the end of the cold war. No longer were readers swallowing hook, line and sinker a whole genre of fiction. Spy book writers had to come up with new ideas, new twists and David Lindsey does a superb job of just that in COLOR OF NIGHT, a book I borrowed from my boyfriend that kept me awake long after my bedtime.

Sara "Babe" Hackett, Girlfriend from the Darkside

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4.0 out of 5 stars A Better, More Interesting Spy Novel, Mar 21 2002
By Jeffrey Knowles (California) - See all my reviews
A skilled Amazon reviewer gently chastised this book for lacking any of the cutting wit that this genre tends to carry forth. This lack is exactly what caused the novel and the characters to stand out for me. The Color Of Night was painted--not written and does not lack in action. The "retired spy is drawn back into the fray" formula is fresh again in this authors skilled hands. A truly enjoyable yarn.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars EXCITING!!!
Harry Stroud is trying to put behind his life as an American intelligence agent, while still mourning the death of his wife, when suddenly enters Mara Song, a beautiful woman with... Read more
Published on April 14 2001 by Nick Gonnella

3.0 out of 5 stars Good, but not up to Lindsey
As an avid David Lindsey reader, I must say that "..Night" had his usual wonderful characterization with deep Jungian shadows (! Read more
Published on Feb 28 2000 by bob60

5.0 out of 5 stars Exquisite writing, especially if you are an artist
As both a writer and artist, I was taken with this exquisitely-drawn - and I do mean "drawn" - novel. Read more
Published on Feb 27 2000 by martha woodworth

1.0 out of 5 stars Multinational ultrasophisticated pretentious snore
One of these where the author is so busy showing off all his research -- because his hero is an art dealer -- he forgets to inject the story with any juice whatsoever. Read more
Published on Oct 25 1999

3.0 out of 5 stars A Decent, Exciting Read
I read Color of Night, because it sounded interesting (though I don't usually like spy novels). I am still glad I read it, but my opinions are mixed. Read more
Published on Oct 23 1999

3.0 out of 5 stars A surprising, imaginative and great read
This book was given to me and I thought it was a refreshing crime/thriller because it does involve a variety of European and American locations and the art world. Read more
Published on Sep 14 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars A wordy, overwritten and generally disappointing book
This was my first sampling of David Lindsay, and I was very dissappointed. I bought it on a whim after reading the flap, and thought it would be enjoyable spy/thriller/mystery... Read more
Published on Sep 8 1999

2.0 out of 5 stars The book is wordy and rambling in style.
This book is laborious reading. It is much longer than necessary to handle the thin plot. The mix of characters with their 'in and out' appearances is disconcerting and only... Read more
Published on Aug 21 1999

3.0 out of 5 stars Not Lindsey's best, but still good
I really liked Lindsey's earlier books. This one falls a bit short, but is still a worthwhile read. I would recommend Requiem For A Glass Heart as his best.
Published on Jun 9 1999

1.0 out of 5 stars very disappointing.lindsey should return to his texas roots.
i have been an avid reader of lindsey since heat from another sun. a cold mind was superb and the dark underbelly of guatamala city in body of truth made for good social... Read more
Published on May 18 1999

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