Reviews

House of the Hanged by Mark Mills

geisttull's review against another edition

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3.0

Very good mystery. Thought i had figured it out but was not quite right in the end. The main character, Tom Nash, is an intriguing and subtley sexy man. Now that i'm finished reading the book, i miss him! The story takes place in exotic locales during the mid 1930s WWII build up. Ends with the possibility of a sequel.

mikewa14's review against another edition

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Boring and rambling - I gave up half way through

kategci's review against another edition

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3.0


Read this for one of my book clubs and I was pleasantly surprised. I am not a huge suspense fan, tending more towards literary fiction, but Mark Mills has created a compelling story, set on the Mediterranean coast between the wars. He believes he has left is spying ways behind to become travel writer, but while on vacation, he learns that sometimes one may leave a life, but it never leaves you.

mactammonty's review

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adventurous mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No

3.0

There were some similarities to "Ripley Underground" by Patricia Highsmith. The setting, the MC's name, the occupation of the MC and a few plot points. They were enough that it spurred me to find out if the author was influenced by the book. He doesn't mention the above book, but another one.  
The story kept me engaged until the very end. I did not like some parts of the ending so the lower stars. 

dmahanty's review against another edition

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4.0

Good!... Set in France post WW1 and the stage is set for WW11. An ex British intelligence officer is being hunted.

alisonannk's review against another edition

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3.0

Having enjoyed The Information Officer I was looking forward to this novel but I must admit I was really disappointed. I even contemplated giving it a 2 star 'it was ok' but I think I may have enjoyed it more and genuinely liked it if I wasn't second guessing how things would turn out. I think the best strategy to enjoy this book is to just sit back and absorb it as it happens.

I was really put off at the start with a lengthy description of sailing, complete with sailing terminology that I wasn't familiar with, that just seemed excessive and out of place. I know that books are meant to expand your horizons but I don't expect to have to have a sailing manual to hand to read a novel. This happened another few times throughout and felt like the author was trying to prove some sailing knowledge or something. It just felt superfluous.

With regards to the entire book and the overall plot, I was left feeling let down. In the novel the information officer, by the same author, there were some amazing twists and turns of the plot. I suppose I was expecting the same, but the single main twist (and some smaller ones) in this novel was really quite predictable (perhaps I read too many books like this and have grown adept at guessing outcomes!) and it didn't even feel like a twist because I could just see it coming. The rest of the plot just felt like a chase to an inevitable end that the author outlines really early on (in my opinion) and leaves little to be left uncovered.

The relationships don't have time to develop before they are being altered and the reader just has to believe the strength of the friendships to begin with in order to share in the main characters' distrust of suspicions. Further relationship development at the start might have made some of the plot more unexpected (instead of just throwing in some flash backs from time to time to support how the relationships are supposed to be but making the plot more obvious in the process). I expected more from some of the characters due to hints and developments they are given but then this comes to nothing; particularly Venetia, Barnaby, Benoit, Ilse and Klaus - I was waiting for some greater sinister motive from each of these characters. Plus some storylines between secondary characters seemed to serve no purpose.

It was an entertaining enough read but could have been so much better and was just too obvious for my liking; with many characters and plots left undeveloped or under-developed when they weren't at the blatantly obvious end of the spectrum.

nigelbrown's review against another edition

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4.0

I was very impressed with my first Mark Mills. All I ask from an author is to educate and entertain.
I'm happy to say that Mills quite comfortably accomplished this. My one complaint, that after taking four hundred pages to lay out superbly the story in just enough detail, he then rushes through the last three chapters like he's left the cakes in the oven. Still thoroughly enjoyable.

stephend81d5's review

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4.0

really enjoyed this spy thriller with plenty of twists and turns and a real page turner based in 1930's france
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