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Operation Pax

Operation Pax

List Price: $11.50
Your Price: $9.77
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Alternate title: The Paper Thunderbolt
Review: Sir John Appleby, Assistant Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police only shows up every now and then in "Operation Pax" to tidy up the plot or rescue his sister, Jane from various predicaments. The main narrator is Albert Routh, a seedy little conman who cheats housewives out of shillings and pence. When he takes a turn on his two-stroke motorcycle toward the sleepy village of Milton Porcorum, he never dreams that by nightfall he will be the most hunted man in England.

Jane and her fiancé, Geoffrey are both students at Oxford when Geoffrey goes missing. A professor of Art History also discovers that his fiancée and her child have vanished, and a posh asylum for alcoholics near Milton Porcorum seems to be involved with the misplaced fiancés. Conman Albert Routh is temporarily incarcerated at the asylum, which is also a center for biological research, and he escapes with a piece of paper that is the only copy of a mysterious formula.

Now the hunt begins.

This book has some of the best chase sequences in all of Innes, including the surreal climax in the vast subterranean stacks of the Bodleian Library by night. It also has some of his wickedest villains who want nothing less than to induce of the lions of humanity to lie down with its lambs. They of course, will remain its only lions.


Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Comatose Vegetables
Review: The object of Operation Pax is to sap the will power and reduce populations to comatose vegetables, which is exactly the effect it has on the reader. After the bizarre but effective opening, involving the utterly contemptible conman Routh, it runs out of vim. The Oxford scenes are long-winded and singularly unamusing, populated by stereotyped dons and ghastly children of the sort that ought to be strangled at birth. When the action "shifts gear" into a more thrillerish line, the book becomes merely dull: chases and abductions are inadequate compensation for an absence of detective interest and the irrelevance of Appleby. At the end, a rather surprising villain is revealed, surprising only because the book relies, as it should never do, on a single clue.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Comatose Vegetables
Review: The object of Operation Pax is to sap the will power and reduce populations to comatose vegetables, which is exactly the effect it has on the reader. After the bizarre but effective opening, involving the utterly contemptible conman Routh, it runs out of vim. The Oxford scenes are long-winded and singularly unamusing, populated by stereotyped dons and ghastly children of the sort that ought to be strangled at birth. When the action "shifts gear" into a more thrillerish line, the book becomes merely dull: chases and abductions are inadequate compensation for an absence of detective interest and the irrelevance of Appleby. At the end, a rather surprising villain is revealed, surprising only because the book relies, as it should never do, on a single clue.


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