April Books 20) Declare, by Tim Powers

I rather liked Declare. As a fan of both Tim Powers’ earlier work and of John Le Carré (though I haven’t read either for years), I was impressed both by the audacity of the one trying to write like the other, with added djinn (rather than gin) and by the fact that he pretty much succeeded in pulling it off. It added local colour that I read the passages set around the Soviet/Turkish frontier while myself on a business visit to a former Soviet state which unexpectedly turned out to include a reception at the residence of one of the Western ambassadors posted there. He captures the tone of the disheartened and disreputable spy thriller awfully well, with the added awful secret that is not merely national security but too dreadful to be told or even fully described (“Lovecraft meets spycraft”, though that tagline gives the incorrect impression that the style is particularly Lovecraftian). I should add, however, that I think Le Carré tends to do slightly better by his women characters than Powers has managed here. Not a quick read, but I enjoyed it.

One thought on “April Books 20) Declare, by Tim Powers

  1. I’m completely with you on Aliens of London, despite some obvious good bits, I can’t bear to watch it most of the time-so many tiny little errors in constitutionality and basic rule of law that didn’t affect the plot and could so easily have been fixed. Combine that with the fart jokes and the interminable chase scenes through Downing St and it just annoys me too much.

    Long Game might be a bit of a blank story wise, but it’s perfectly watchable and enjoyable and doesn’t hurt my head with the annoyance of it all.

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