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Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

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Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton



Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

Download Ebook PDF Online Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

The classic spy thriller of lethal computer-age intrigue and a maniac’s private cold war, featuring the same anonymous narrator and milieu of The IPCRESS File.

The fourth of Deighton’s novels to be narrated by the unnamed employee of WOOC(P) is the thrilling story of an anti-communist espionage network owned by a Texan billionaire, General Midwinter, run from a vast computer complex known as the Brain.

After having been recruited by Harvey Newbegin, the narrator travels from the bone-freezing winter of Helsinki, Riga and Leningrad, to the stifling heat of Texas, and soon finds himself tangling with enemies on both sides of the Iron Curtain.

Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #459938 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2009-10-01
  • Released on: 2009-10-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook
Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

Review

‘Dazzlingly intelligent and subtle’ Sunday Times

‘Worthy of Raymond Chandler… intelligent… inventive… constantly entertaining’ Sunday Telegraph

‘Such credibility, such accurate line-by-line beaming of a sheer sense of the actual… a glittering, wintry entertainment’ The Guardian

‘Deighton is so far in the front of other writers in the field that they are not even in sight’ Sunday Times

‘Nobody now seriously doubts that Deighton is the most credible of all the spysmiths’ The Scotsman

About the Author

Born in London, Len Deighton served in the RAF before graduating from the Royal College of Art (which recently elected him a Senior Fellow). While in New York City working as a magazine illustrator he began writing his first novel, The Ipcress File, which was published in 1962. He is now the author of more than thirty books of fiction and non-fiction. At present living in Europe, he has, over the years, lived with his family in ten different countries from Austria to Portugal.

From AudioFile Len Deighton's latest spy story has a totally implausible plot full of anti-communist fanatics, double agents and a computer which gives the operatives their instructions. It thankfully contains a large measure of wry humor and skepticism which help the listener appreciate the spoof. Paul Daneman takes on the international cast of British, Russian and American characters like old friends. His wide range of accents identify each speaker though the women and children sound a bit silly with squeaky voices. Daneman's pace follows the action and he performs with a polished smoothness and professionalism. R.F.W. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine


Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

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Most helpful customer reviews

13 of 13 people found the following review helpful. North by Northeast By John Dziadecki The man with no name ("Harry Palmer" in the film versions) heads into global trouble in Helsinki, Leningrad, Riga, New York, San Antonio and London. His quary is a deluded, megalomanic nationalist who uses a giant computer and people in an attempt to free the Russian peole of their Soviet oppressors. Len Deighton takes us on a journey to the frozen north and across the pond to the US and back again on a rollercoaster journey filled with his brand of insight and deadpan humor levened with enough intrigue and disbelief to keep you hooked.This novel is the follow through of Deighton's "The Ipcress File" and "Funeral in Berlin".Readers either like or dislike the author's prose style and wry humor. Maybe you just need to be in the mood for it. Right now, I am and I like it. Great reading on a hot summer's day.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. A planned invasion of Latvia in the 1970s By Alfred J. Kwak W.O.O.C.(P) is a discretely-located spying agency of the British Ministry of Defence, headed by a Mr. Dawlish. In "Spy Story" he is the owner of a pre-WW II car, in this book an expert on garden weeds. Its premises in Charlotte Street encompass floor after floor of ostensibly unattractive or failing businesses, behind whose doors the agency works, with the Dispatch Section always booming with brass band music. Dawlish is the only staff member with an office with two windows.A nameless but likable spy tells his story in the I form. He is sent by Dawlish to Scandinavia to find out more about rumours that could be detrimental to the UK, the US, the Soviet Union, even to world peace. His brief: "Find out more. If possible, infiltrate!" His tour includes Helsinki, Leningrad, Riga, New York and San Antonio, Texas. There he is introduced to the Billion Dollar Brain, a series of mainframe computers purported to have been programmed to prevent human error in intelligence operations. The Brain is owned not by the US government, but by a right-wing organisation headed by a naturalised, former Latvian general. If the planned operation targeting Latvia is successful, rows and rows of other primed and linked mainframes will take on the rest of the Soviet Union...The (somewhat implausible) plot is nevertheless great, and so are the characters and dialogues. KGB Colonel Stok (who earlier appeared in "Spy Story") catches the nameless hero in the Soviet Union, but realizes he needs him to stay alive to find out more and sends him home. But not before proving his admiration for the British WW II war effort by reciting at length from his favourite writer in English, the 18th-century Scottish poet Robert Burns. The enigmatic, extravert Finnish girl Signe, her American lover Harvey and the spy himself are interesting characters too. Descriptions of the different venues are also authentic.Len Deighton is also a renowned war historian. The terrible facts included in BDB about Latvian collaboration with Germany during WW II and its eagerness to play the role of executioner on its behalf, is most probably based on fact. Latvians, especially, should read and enjoy this book and provide comments.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Shades of "Seven Days in May" By Russ Burgos Part of the "Harry Palmer" series -- though the character is only "Harry Palmer" in the films -- by Len Deighton. Of them, this was the least convincing to me as a story. Deighton tries to bring the real world into the fictional one by having "Harry" -- or our MOOC(P) Op -- take on a fanatical right-wing militia funded by a billionaire whose goal is to force the USA and USSR into a conflict he expects the USA to win. The plot seems forced, and Deighton seemed to be trying just a bit too hard with this one.

See all 9 customer reviews... Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton


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Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton
Billion-Dollar Brain, by Len Deighton

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