1974; 311 pages. New Author? : Yes. Genres : Espionage; Conspiracy
Thriller; Suspense; Movie Tie-in. Overall Rating : 8½*/10.
Welcome to the Washington D.C. branch of the American
Literary Historical Society! You can
tell by its name that its purpose in life is . . . um . . . something literary,
I suppose. Or historical, maybe. That name seems a bit vague.
Actually, the Society is a CIA
front for one of its very unimportant branches.
Its function is to “keep track of all
espionage and related acts recorded in literature.” In other words, its agents sit around and
read spy thrillers and murder mysteries, checking to see if any author out
there has written a plot with details about espionage that are too close for comfort to
how the CIA conducts its business.
All in all, it’s a pretty tame assignment. Yet today, some person or persons walked in
through the front doors of the American Literary Historical Society and shot
everybody in the department to death.
Well, not quite
everybody. One member of the group had the
good fortune of being out of the office, picking up lunch for the rest of his coworkers. Ronald Malcolm. Now all sorts of people, some CIA, others of
unknown loyalties, would like to bring Malcom in for questioning.
Or kill him.
What’s To Like...
James Grady’s Six
Days of the Condor is the basis for the 1975 blockbuster
political-thriller film Three Days of the Condor, although “loosely based” would be a more apt
description, as evidenced by the length of the book’s titular chase scene being
cut in half.
Malcolm’s chances of staying
alive are slim. The reader may know that
Malcolm has had a narrow escape from death, but his employer, the CIA,
doesn’t. They quickly realize they have
a turncoat in their midst, and the Number One suspect is that oh-so-lucky
employee who just happened to be out of the office when the assassins struck. Meanwhile, the baddies too learn they’ve overlooked
a victim, and are determined to correct that oversight. Tell me, Malcolm, where do you hide when
everybody is after you?
The storytelling is
spellbinding. The reader knows that
everything is going to turn out okay, but the bad guys are just as resourceful
as the good guys, and logic tells us that a bookish nerd will not fare well
against well-armed and highly-trained gunmen.
The technical details felt well-researched, especially when it came to
lethal firearms.
Six Days of the Condor
was published in 1974, and it was fun to re-experience that era. At one point, Malcom avails himself to a
“battered Corvair”, which I happened to have one of back then, and in battered
condition as well. Later, Malcolm hides
out at a “homosexual hangout”, which the author informs us can also be called a
“gay” bar. Soon afterward, he hitches a
ride with a driver looking for nubile girls who will do anything, and he means anything
for some marijuana. Even later, the
action takes place at an airport, where security is so lax that evidently anyone and everyone can
enter with a handgun hidden under their jackets.
The ending is both exciting
and twisty. All the plot threads get
tied up, the good guys prevail, and the bad guys are foiled. There are some sequels, but they
appear to be limited to six short stories and a novella.
Ratings…
Amazon:
4.2/5
based on 1,853 ratings and 328 reviews.
Goodreads: 4.09/5 based on 16,761
ratings and 448 reviews
Things That Sound Dirty, But Aren’t…
[The man], slightly wounded in the neck, desperately reached for
the gun in his back pocket, but his pants were around his ankles. (loc. 2714)
Excerpts...
That morning at 3:15 Heidegger unlocked his
door to the knock of police officers.
When he opened the door he found two men in ordinary clothes smiling at
him. One was very tall and painfully
thin. The other was quite distinguished,
but if you looked in his eyes you could tell he wasn’t a banker.
The two men shut the door behind them. (loc. 688)
The terminal was beginning to fill with the
bustling people who would pass through it during the day. A wheezing janitor swept cigarette butts off the
red rug. A mother tried to coax a bored
infant into submission. A nervous coed
sat wondering if her roommate’s half-fare card would work. Three young Marines headed home to Michigan
wondered if she would work. A retired
wealthy executive and a penniless wino slept in adjoining chairs, both waiting
for daughters to fly in from Detroit. A
Fuller Brush executive sat perfectly still, bracing himself for the effects of
a jet flight on a gin hangover. (loc.
2672)
Kindle Details…
Six
Days of the Condor sells for $8.99 at Amazon right now. James Grady has seven other e-books available
at Amazon, including two that have tie-ins to Six Days of the Condor. They range in price from $1.99 to
$11.99.
“I Imagine there
are many who frown on the U.S. government pushing dope.” (loc. 2560)
The quibbles are minor. The cussing, frankly, was a lot less than I
expected, just 12 instances in the first 25%.
OTOH, there were also a half dozen rolls-in-the-hay.
Each of the twelve chapters
starts out with a quote. Some are by US
presidents about the CIA, and those were quite applicable. Others were from Fred Reinfeld’s The Complete Chess Course and left me scratching
my head, despite the fact that I’m an avid chessplayer.
Last of all, it surprised me
that in the one or two gunfights betwixt nerdy Malcolm and the ruthless
killers, our hero fares rather well. Of
course, I admit it would’ve been a short, forgettable tale if the Malcolm had
been blown away in the first hour of the chase.
But I pick at nits. For me, Six Days
of the Condor was an intense, exciting, fingernails-biting story, and
it’s easy to see why it was picked up and developed into a big-budget movie featuring
big-budget stars like Faye Dunaway, Robert Redford, Cliff Robertson, and Max
von Sydow. Despite all the changes they
made to James Grady’s original story, including renaming most of the characters
(Ronald Malcolm becomes Joe Turner)
and relocating the setting (Washington DC is replaced by New York
City), I may have to see if Netflix carries this movie.
8½ Stars. At the beginning of the e-book is a “Confession” section wherein James Grady gives the background to his writing Six Days of the Condor, a short biography of his life pre- and post- the book being published, and his experience as a technical adviser on the movie. This takes up 15% of the e-book. I suggest reading it after you’ve read the story, not before.
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