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The Eleventh Commandment

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Jeffrey Archer's gripping, critically-acclaimed suspense novels have made him one of the top selling authors of the world. He is also a powerful political figure. A former member of Parliament, Archer is a member of the British House of Lords and Deputy Chairman of England's Conservative Party. In The Eleventh Commandment, he takes you on a whirlwind journey from the inner circles of the CIA to the front lines of international espionage. For 28 years, Connor Fitzgerald has led a double life. Behind the mask of a Maryland Insurance executive, Connor has worked as the CIA's most skilled assassin. But now, as Connor follows orders to close in on the new Russian president, he discovers a far more dangerous threat. His boss, the director of CIA, is plotting against him. The eleventh commandment: "Thou shalt not be caught", becomes a challenge that fills Connor's path with nonstop action and danger. Narrator Paul Hecht captures each of the powerful characters and highlights an unforgettable web of intrigue that will keep you enthralled until the final, surprising twist.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      In this densely plotted, improbable thriller, a CIA assassin of impeccable integrity has to be eliminated to save his lady boss's hide. Somehow he escapes from all the traps laid for him, but can he ultimately save himself and his family from the power of America's secret govern-ment, as well as the Russian mafia? Maybe--with a little help from his friends, one of whom is "deus ex machina"--without whom the book would be half as long and the hero twice as dead. Martin Jarvis plods through the ever-thickening plot as if he couldn't wait to get out of the studio. But Jarvis's worst is still better than most narrators' best. Aficionados of this type of writing will hardly know the difference. Y.R. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      June 1, 1998
      From the first line, former British M.P. Archer (The Fourth Estate, etc.) navigates a nonstop, rocketing ride. Middle-aged Connor Fitzgerald is a happily married man, decorated veteran and devoted father; he's also an "NOC," a "non-official cover officer" for the CIA specializing in assassinations. The killing of a Colombian drug lord leaves Connor out of sync with the Democratic president's policy, so the director of the CIA, a woman, sets Connor up to take the fall in a fake assassination of the leading candidate for the Russian presidency, an unreconstructed Stalinist. Connor (aided by an ex-CIA deputy director whose life he once saved) gets out of a St. Petersburg jail and falls into the hands of the Russian Mafia. Wheels spin within wheels until the slam-bang climax during the new Russian president's visit to Washington. Some plot details, including the final twist, are a tad hokey, and Connor keeps his much-touted charisma under wraps, yet Archer sweeps us along (and even finds time to write himself into the plot as London's mayor, a position he's seeking in real life). The only boo-boo here is Archer's unwitting revivification of flamboyant Redskins owner and Northern Virginia tycoon Jack Kent Cooke (though he was a character). In any case, readers won't mind the occasional giddiness: this isn't Tolstoy, it's fun. Simultaneous Harper audio.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Martin Jarvis give his usual--top-flight--performance to Archer's spies and assassins caper. Jarvis has a delightful characterization for each of the key players. He captures each from the (female) director of the CIA to the Russian Mafia, playing them a bit over the top, but Archer writes that way, so why not! Jarvis is brilliant in a key scene of suspense, borrowed from The Day of the Jackal perhaps, as the assassin awaits his political target. This fast-paced thriller keeps listeners waiting for the next move. R.F.W. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine
    • AudioFile Magazine
      Thou shalt not get caught may be an assassin's eleventh commandment, but it's impossible not to get caught up in this cleverly plotted thriller. Connor Fitzgerald's secret life as a CIA operative threatens to unravel following the attempted killing of the new and reactionary Russian president. Pace and pauses are important, and narrator Hecht gets them just right. He also gets inside a variety of characters--the decent American president, several unpleasant Russians, Connor's kaleidoscopic aliases, the devious female CIA head and, of course, Connor himself, whose basic humanity and long-term love for his wife are juxtaposed with his ruthless on-the-job persona. J.B.G. Winner of AUDIOFILE Earphones Award (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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