Turncoat by Aaron Elkins

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(Hardcover - 1 ED)

  • Pub. Date: May 2002
  • 298pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2002
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Hardcover, 298pp

    Synopsis

    It begins with the appearance of a stranger at his door -- an unwelcome visitor ranting madly about money, death, and forgiveness; a man known all too well to Pete's distraught wife, Lily: her father. The next day the man is dead -- and Lily disappears, leaving a note behind begging Pete not to follow. Now, with a business card from an antiques dealer in Barcelona as his only lead, Pete Simon embarks on a twisted and perilous journey that will carry him to places where the hideous crimes of the Nazi aggressors remain fresh in the minds of those who cannot forget ... or forgive. But each door he opens leads him deeper into a painful and shocking past. And suddenly an ordinary American has become more than a concerned husband and seeker of a bitter truth; he has become the target of desperate, dangerous men and their terrifying vengeance.

    A haunting parable of good and evil and all the shifting shades of humanity in between, by the Edgar Award-winning master of suspense.

    Publishers Weekly

    Best known for the witty, Francophiliac Gideon Oliver mystery series, Elkins here delivers a stand-alone thriller that probes wartime guilt from multiple angles. For history professor Pete Simon and his French-born wife, Lily, Brooklyn in 1963 is worlds away from the horrors of WWII. But when Lily's father, Marcel Vercier, turns up on their doorstep begging her to view an old film, the Simons' cozy life combusts. Lily had always maintained that her father had been shot by the Nazis in 1943; now, caught in her lie and troubled by unfathomable other secrets, she refuses to answer Pete's urgent questions. Before the Simons can see the film, Vercier is murdered, and masked thugs break into their apartment, demanding to have it. Lily hands it over, then disappears, leaving Pete a cryptic note about needing space. Feeling like a sap, Pete decides to find her anyway, flying to Barcelona, where Vercier was apparently partner in an antiques dealership. A tough interview with the dead man's cagey co-partner, Charles Lebrun, reveals little about the film, the murder or Lily's whereabouts, but it does enlighten Pete as to Vercier's wartime collaboration with Nazi occupiers. As Pete delves deeper into Vercier's past, he learns painful truths about Lily's family, finally concluding, When it comes to making blanket moral judgements about people"please, leave me out of it. Some of the characters are sketchy, particularly Lily, who never amounts to more than an incredible simulation of Leslie Caron. The plot takes familiar paths, with an ending that ties up matters rather too neatly, especially given Pete's hard-earned tolerance for moral relativity. Still, this first-person novel captivates, largely because Pete's voice, a garlicky mix of France and Brooklyn, always sounds just right. 5-city West Coast author tour. (May 1) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Aaron Elkins is also the author of two stand-alone thrillers as well as three novels in a series written with his wife Charlotte, and three novels in another series that takes place in the art world.

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    Customer Reviews

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    Turncoat: A Novel of Suspenseby Anonymous

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    July 15, 2002: Suspense takes a turn for the sinister when a tale is set in foreign locales. Edgar Award winner Aaron Elkins knows this well and utilizes it to perfection in his latest thriller 'Turncoat.' Following on the heels of his acclaimed 'Loot' and 'Skeleton Dance,' we knew it would be a riveting read. We weren't disappointed. Opening lines set the scene and pique interest: 'For everybody else in America it was the day JFK was killed in Dallas. For me, it would always be the day Lily's father turned up on our doorstep. But first things first....' Among the first things is an introduction to Pete Simon, a man who has everything he could want. Twenty years married he is still very much in love with his wife, Lily; he enjoys his profession; their home is warm and inviting. Pete's plate is full until it is overturned by the appearance of a stranger at their door. The interloper appears to be mad, raving about money, death, forgiveness. Pete has never seen him before; Lily has. The stranger is her father, a man she said had died some years ago in France. On the following day the man's body is discovered. He is now truly dead, brutally beaten and abandoned. Worst of all, Lily vanishes leaving only a note imploring Pete to let her go, not to follow her. Where she could have gone or why she left is a mystery to her anguished husband. He has but one clue: the business card of a Barcelona antiques dealer. Of course, Pete goes in search of his wife little knowing the dangers he will face. Once in Europe he finds himself among those who cannot forget the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis. As the path to Lily's whereabouts seems to be getting warm Pete is also met with dreadful secrets, long hidden secrets of collaboration with a vicious enemy. Would those who cannot forget seek to revenge themselves with Pete? Elkins's portrait of good and evil is stunning in every way. 'Turncoat' is a taut thriller, and startling reminder of how the present is affected by the past.

    Turncoat: A Novel of Suspenseby Anonymous

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    March 25, 2002: Peter and Lily Simon have been happily married for seventeen years. Although both were born in France, they met in England where he served during World War II as an army air officer and she worked at the nearby Free French headquarters. They have been living the American dream for years but it becomes a nightmare in 1963 when Lily?s father knocks on the door.

    Lily told Pete when they first met that her father died at the hands of the Germans. When Lily closes the door on her father without giving him a chance to speak to her, Pete demands explanations that Lily refuses to give. When her father is murdered, Lily disappears and Pete travels to Barcelona then to Veaudry, France where he learns what Lily has spent so many years trying to hide. After almost getting killed, Pete is finally able to find his wife only to have her kidnapped by professionals for hire.

    TURNCOAT is a fascinating thriller but it is also a family drama about a woman tortured by her past and the man who loves her so much that he wants to break the chain that bind her to a world that no longer exists except in memory. Aaron Elkins is a gifted storyteller and readers will come away from his latest endeavor wanting to read his previous works.

    Harriet Klausner