We're not huge fans of Alan Furst but MOTEV is, as are numerous of our readers and fellow bloggers. Hence this link to a San Jose Mercury News piece on Dark Voyage.
Through his characters, Furst recognizes the battles and sacrifices of the real people whose lives he has studied. The disillusioned Cold War spy offered by such novelists as John le Carré is dirtied by his work. In much current fiction, spies revel in their capacity for violence. Furst's characters certainly do things they're not proud of or that fail. They may question the significance of their efforts, but never the significance of their cause.For some characters, that cause may be the creation of a livable world; for others, more desperate, the creation of a small livable space in a world gone wrong. Each has his own stories and reasons. In wartime, a man can indeed be an island, cut off from the whole. Capt. DeHaan bases a shipboard sermon on a quotation from Martin Luther: ``Everyone must do his own believing, as he will have to do his own dying.''
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