Spies
a novel
1st ed.
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Author
Publication
2002 - Metropolitan Books, New York, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
65,250 words, Guess
Page Count
261 pages
Identifiers
- Internet Archivespiesnovel000fray
- Internet Archivespiesnovel0000fray_a5f1
- Internet Archivespiesnovel0000fray_x9s2
- Internet Archivespiesnovel0000fray
- ISBN-100805070583
and 6 more
- ISBN-139780805070583
- LibraryThing93503
- Library of Congress Control Number2001039840
- OCLC Control Number47973293
- Better World Books9780805070583
- Open LibraryOL3949245M
Classifications
- DDC823/.914
- LCCPR6056.R3 S65 2002
- LCCPR6056.R3S65 2002
Description
"The sudden trace of a troubling, familiar smell takes Stephen Wheatley back to a dimly remembered yet disturbing childhood summer in wartime London. As he pieces together the scattered images, we are transported to a quiet street, where two boys - Keith and his sidekick Stephen - are engaged in their own version of the war effort: spying on the neighbors, recording their movements, ferreting out their secrets.". "In the peaceful Close, the only visible signs of war are the nightly blackout and a single random bombsite. To the boys, though, the whole district is riddled with secret passages, underground laboratories, and hideaways for secret agents that must be monitored. And then, with six shocking words, Keith reveals that the Germans have infiltrated his family; from that point, the espionage game takes a sinister and unintended turn. A wife's simple errands and a family's ordinary rituals, the unremarkable geography of post office and railway tracks, are no longer the objects of childish speculation but the tragic elements of adult catastrophe."--BOOK JACKET.
First Sentence
The third week of June, and there it is again: the same almost embarrassingly familiar breath of sweetness that comes every year about this time.
Description
"The sudden trace of a troubling, familiar smell takes Stephen Wheatley back to a dimly remembered yet disturbing childhood summer in wartime London. As he pieces together the scattered images, we are transported to a quiet street, where two boys - Keith and his sidekick Stephen - are engaged in their own version of the war effort: spying on the neighbors, recording their movements, ferreting out their secrets.". "In the peaceful Close, the only visible signs of war are the nightly blackout and a single random bombsite. To the boys, though, the whole district is riddled with secret passages, underground laboratories, and hideaways for secret agents that must be monitored. And then, with six shocking words, Keith reveals that the Germans have infiltrated his family; from that point, the espionage game takes a sinister and unintended turn. A wife's simple errands and a family's ordinary rituals, the unremarkable geography of post office and railway tracks, are no longer the objects of childish speculation but the tragic elements of adult catastrophe."--BOOK JACKET.
Subjects
Topics
Places
Genres
- Fiction
Other Editions
- Spies: a novel
Show 5 more editions
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