Differences between revisions 9 and 10
Revision 9 as of 2015-10-09 18:51:37
Size: 7762
Comment:
Revision 10 as of 2015-10-09 18:51:55
Size: 7763
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 78: Line 78:
== High Place = == High Place ==

Rogue Male

Geoffrey Household, 1939, New York Review Books, with a 2007 introduction by Victoria Nelson.


An unnamed British hunter lines up his rifle on an unnamed dictator (Hitler) and is captured, tortured, and left for dead. The novel describes his escape, evading the dictator's extensive spy network with woodcraft and cunning. In the same genre as John Buchan's Thirty Nine Steps and four other novels about Richard Hanney. Household's book is less jingoistic and more psychological - a better story IMHO.


Rogue Justice

Geoffrey Household, 1982, Penguin Paperback, purchased at Powells.


On page 185, we learn that our protagonist is Raymond Ingleram, who I will call RI. British father Ralph, Austrian mother.

  • Saul Harding, London Solicitor.
  • von Lauen (AKA Major Quive-Smith of UK) (AKA Don Ernesto Menendez Peraza of Nicaragua)
    • German agent killed by RI in the first book, Don Ernesto passport used by RI.

  • p10 Hauptmann Hasse, Sicherheitsdienst (SD) killed in Rostock bombing, identity assumed by RI.

  • p66 Moshe Shapir, Jewish escapee who travels with RI.

  • pXX Cantescu, Romanian escapee who travels with RI.

  • p68 Casimir, Polish guerilla leader
  • pXX Voevod, guerilla leader in the Carpathians
  • p96 RI's murdered wife, "daughter of Prince Euersperg and Jewess"
  • p118 Domenitza
  • p119 Kurtbek, general Turkish Ordnance
  • p172 Dionysius, Greek companion

April 1942, RI is in Rostock prison in Nazi Germany awaiting interrogation by Hasse. He spent the prior three years pretending to be fascist Nicaraguan Don Ernesto, hoping to get close to Hitler in order to assassinate him. He was identified as an impostor by von Lauen's widow, escapes through Copenhagen and Sweden, but is refused by the British embassy and sent back to Copenhagen and capture.

The novel describes his escape. He frees and collaborates with 4 prisoners being transported to Auschwitz. He travels through Cracow Poland, Dukla Pass Slovakia, Sighet and Bucharest Romania, Istanbul Turkey, and Greece. With a German passport of Ludwig Weber, he captures a plane flying him, his guards, and General Kurtbek to Salonica Greece, diverts to the plain of Aliakmon on the way to Thessalonika. (p138) fights the German garrison in Kozani Greece, Yannina in western Greece, then joins the Italians and a oil tanker to Benghazi. (p181) tanker torpedoed by British destroyer. (p198) "killed 18 enemies". (p200) Ship from Suez, escapes at Mombasa Kenya. (p204) Ruzizi River, Belgian nunnery in Burundi as Bill Smith. (p206) end, killed with attacking lion.


Against The Wind

Geoffrey Household, 1959, Little Brown and Company. PSU Library PR6015.07884 Z54 1959


Autobiography of Household (1900-1988), 2/3 of the way though his life, 1/3 of the way though his writing career, which took off with Rogue Male and restarted after the 1939-1944 war. Three sections, Traveller (sales), Soldier (army intelligence), Craftsman (writing). The first section is interesting, but has way too many diversions into the droll phrase rather than the descriptive one - distracting. I'm amused that before the war, Household helped sell more printing ink than was ever used to print his books after; Household may have been a competent salesman, but not a curious one. He writes of many quick befriendings of foreigners. Writing being a lonely profession (and he illustrates that), this seems contradictory - perhaps he chose to disappear behind the safety of a typewriter. Hard to say - I would like to read a biography by an observer rather than the subject, and compare notes.


Doom's Caravan

Geoffrey Household, 1971, Little Brown and Company. PSU Library PR6015.07885 D6 1971


Novel about counterintelligence in Palestine and Lebanon in 1942, drawn from authors time doing just that.

  • UN Unnamed narrator

  • p04 I(b) branch of the general staff responsible for counterespionage.
  • p04 Captain Oliver Enwin, British interpreter and translator, assistant defense security officer (A.D.S.O.) Nazareth, goes missing
    • p66 Youssef Mokkaddem - Iraqi
    • p166 Brother Aloysius - Irish
    • p236 Ibrahim el Amr - refugee from Sumatra - Marries Valerie, professor of Oriental languages, Adana Turkey
  • p07 Jeremy Fanshawe, chief of military intelligence in Palestine
  • p08 Boutany, Enwin's Lebanese Christian civilian clerk
  • p11 staff: Seargent Major Limpsfield
  • p12 staff" Corporal Zappa
  • p24 January 1942 Move to Tipoli, Lebanon
  • p25 9th Army and Australian Corps
  • p25 Lance Corporal Holloway "illiterate reports"
  • p27 Captain Magnat of the Deuxieme Bureau - staunch left-wing, republican atheist
  • p28 Blaise d'Aulnoy colonial administrator loyal to Vichy, retirement estate north of village of Sir
    • loaned to Mrs. Biddy Ronson-Bolbec and daughter Valerie (p33), servant Ahmed.
  • p38 Bridle path to Hermel
  • p51 Brigadier Reggie Paunce
  • p54 gendarme Lieutenant Khalid, horse roan with a stat
  • p63 staff: Seargent Wilson, Corporal Flowers
  • p66 Rashid Ali's rebellion, works with Germans
  • p78 Khalid attacks UN, who kills him with .45 service revolver p107 Vichy agent

    • p192 "in Cairo hospital recoverint from head wound, now interrogated by Security Intelligence Middle East"
  • p85 staff: Corporal Davila
  • p93 Moustofi Khan, Persian (friend of Ahmed)
    • p130 German companions, "Colonel" and "Hadji" (Yellow Socks)
  • p96 Abdullah El Bessam (Fatty), age 51, banker, grain speculator, "homosexual" child abuser
  • p119 staff: Lance Corporal Gunn
  • p149 Captain Johns, commander 64th Indian Mule Company (Urdu Havildars)
    • p150 tulwar, short broad bladed saber
  • p187 Ras Shaqqa tunnel, "exploder" = fuse?, explosives to farmhouse on path
  • p204 UN captured, prisoner in basement, p211 quarry room behind stables, p215 caravan to farmhouse on path

    • p224 Ahmed beheaded, exposives in farmhouse set off, six chests of currency captured, 14,000 pounds
  • p229 "riding pillion" the seat behind the driver of a motorcycle


Summon the Bright Water

Geoffrey Household, Atlantic / Little Brown. PSU Library PR6015.07885 S9 1981


Another brave adventurer hiding-in-the-English-woods, and in the Severn River. The hero is "economic archeologist" Piers Colet, the love interest Elsa, the bad guy her uncle Simeon Marrin, who finds a cache of gold in an underwater cave and finances a cult community, Broom Lodge, in the Forest Of Dean between Cinderford and Lydney. A strange concoction of caves, stalking, diving, and theft, with facts twisted or created to support a bizarre plot. Our protagonist kills Marrin, and later the chief acolyte, oh gosh I'm so sorry. Feh.

The spoiler: Atlantis was real, on the shore of the Atlantic ocean during the ice age, now submerged by higher sea levels. Atlantis had a lot of cheap gold, and left some as part of an ancient trading expedition. And our protagonist waives all professional responsibility by grabbing the gold, destroying the precious archeological site, and donating half the gold to the cult community, keeping the other half, and melting it all down. Feh again. But I suppose not bad for an 80 year old author a few years before the Final Edit.


High Place

Geoffrey Household, Atlantic / Little Brown, 1950. Multnomah County Central Library, Fiction.


  • p79 "I do not think he considered men who fought for land or any material posession more blamworthy than the rest of us; he simply meant they were as unapporachable, as spiritually dead as mad dogs."

Me: In Israel/Palestine, they fight to the death over who gets to be buried there second.

RogueMale (last edited 2019-10-21 04:56:20 by KeithLofstrom)