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The Tourist by Olen Steinhauer
#1
This book is not to be confused with the movie of the same name starring Angelina Jolie and Johnny Depp, although both have scenes in Venice.

My father recommended this book to me and I read it which isn't usually the case.

It's a spy thriller set against the backdrop of 9/11 without really having anything to do with 9/11. Tourists are basically Wetwork agents who work as a part of the CIA. Milo is the said agent. He breaks down. He gets set behind a desk and tries to start his life. Until nefarious people from his tourist past come back to disrupt his tranquility.

The book was enjoyable. As all good spy thrillers do it filled the world with paranoia and had you believing in every conspiracy thrillers. And it was quite twisty right up until the end. I still don't believe half the things I'm supposed to believe. That's right I have questions about the veracity of a fictional character.

Mr. Steinhauer also a series of five books, again spies, set in an Easter Bloc country. I thought I would read this and if it were good, I could then go on and read the series. So series here I come.
So much for the flickr badge idea. Dammit
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#2
It was disappointing. It was more like Angie and Johnny decided to dress up all fancy and go to expensive parties in Venice, and use the movie as a vehicle to do so. For a moment, it's as if they are aspiring to that classic James Bond style, but it just comes off as those two dressing up in gorgeous clothes and going to gorgeous locales.

Depp is funny, but he could have really been much funnier. Angie looks like a Bratz doll, a living uber-hot Bratz Doll. The action is mediocre, the acting is negligible, the spy tech is preposterous and by the latter half of the film, the mcguffin is predictable. It's one of those 'this could have been so good with different actors, writers and directors....and a sword fight.'
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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#3
Quote: 'this could have been so good with different actors, writers and directors....and a sword fight.'

That's good. I'm a-gonna quote youse.
In the Tudor Period, Fencing Masters were classified in the Vagrancy Laws along with Actors, Gypsys, Vagabonds, Sturdy Rogues, and the owners of performing bears.
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#4
Big Grin
Shadow boxing the apocalypse
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