Reviews

El manifiesto negro by Frederick Forsyth

angelahayes's review against another edition

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4.0

Frederick Forsyth novels were a familiar fixture in our household when I was growing up, as both my parents loved his work. He was amongst the first ‘adult’ reads that I was drawn to at the time. So, my love affair with his books began, and over the years I have read everything he’s written- keeping up with any new release/s.
As my mother has been in and out of hospital quite a lot over the past year and a half, I am keeping her supplied with books to read, and buddy reading them with her, or reading them to her when she isn’t well enough to read for herself. We have gotten through quite a lot of books in this time and it has been wonderful to discuss each one with her as we read/finish. It has been a great bonding experience for us, and Mr. Forsyth is our current author of choice- and we have both really enjoyed revisiting all his books, again.
Mr. Forsyth has a great knack for writing wonderfully suspenseful and exciting read, there is always great tension, action, drama, some danger, intrigue, and lots more to hold your attention. I can always count on him to deliver an intriguing read.

jbrito's review against another edition

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4.0

As always a great story from Forsyth but again, all those little details...

jaco_minnaar's review against another edition

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4.0

This isn't a bad read. Not by a long shot. It has a compelling plot, strong characters, the works. The problem, however, is that almost half of the book is background and exposition. It jumps back and forth between timelines, explaining how the main character got to where he is. This is entirely unnecessary, as it has almost no bearing on the main plot.

Still a good read though.

caz241153's review against another edition

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5.0

Brilliant book. LOts of twists and turns. Excellent storyline. Very clever plot.

smcleish's review against another edition

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2.0

Originally published on my blog here in November 1999.

Frederick Forsyth always has interesting ideas, but his writing never does them justice. Icon is no exception to this rule. The idea - a new Hitler attempting to take power in the chaotic ruins of a Russia devastated by mega-inflation and uncontrollable organised crime - is excellent. The major problem is the narrative style. The story takes second place to exposition of the idea - the reader does not really need pages of description of fictional Russian politics, for example. Such diversions break the tension which is needed in a thriller.

The primacy of the idea also overcomes any serious attempt at characterisation, an accusation usually levelled at science fiction rather than thrillers. Icon's characters are just ciphers and stereotypes, from Igor Komarov to the Western agents trying to prevent him from gaining power. Forsyth has bought into the idea that Western is good, Eastern bad; the Russians are corrupt, the British and Americans fighting for an ideal (except of course for Russian controlled double agents).

Like the best of Forsyth's novels, [b:The Day of the Jackal|540020|The Day of the Jackal|Frederick Forsyth|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1320992758s/540020.jpg|1792180], the idea of Icon is centred around a person. In the earlier book, this forces Forsyth to overcome his limitations as a writer of characters, but Komarov does not do this. The idea is sufficiently interesting and well enough done, however, to keep you reading to the end.
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