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Hornet Flight by Ken Follett
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Hornet Flight

by Ken Follett

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
858204,958 (3.53)2
Info:

Dutton Adult (2002), Hardcover, 416 pages

Member:jamesabg
Collections:Your library, L3-Ironing Room WallRating:
Tags:2115, L3, fiction, historical fiction, suspense, espionage, thriller, bookcrossing
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English (17)  French (1)  Italian (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (20)
Showing 1-5 of 17 (next | show all)
I liked this one because its about foiling Nazis. I try to read every Ken Follett book I can get my hands on. Usually second hand stores have a lot of them. ( )
  BoomChick | Oct 13, 2009 |
Great read. Suspenseful from beginning to end. ( )
  Scaryguy | Aug 24, 2009 |
A young couple escapes from Nazi Belgium in a WW2 Hornet Plane ( )
  amacmillen | Aug 5, 2009 |
Another great spy book by Follett; full of suspense and intrigue. Definitely recommend it. ( )
  plunkinberry | Jul 28, 2009 |
Interesting read about Danish resistance and their operation by England in 1941. A number of implausible events take away from the story and the book is a bit choppy. A decent story, but no where near Follet's best. ( )
  damcg63 | Jul 2, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 17 (next | show all)
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Hornet Flight

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0451210743, Paperback)

An old-fashioned tale of ordinary people thrown into the drama and danger of war, Hornet Flight is a rippingly good read. The time is 1941, and British bombers attacking Germany are being blown out of the sky in horrific numbers. How do the Nazis know they're coming? The answer is an infant technology called radar, and the Brits--with help from the Danish Resistance--must figure out how and where the German radar stations operate.

Follett, an old pro at World War II storytelling, vividly evokes the period, creating a sense not of historical re-creation but of urgently unfolding news. His cast of characters is memorable, including Harald Olufsen, a brainy 18-year-old pulled into the Resistance half against his will, and--typically for Follett--several central, well-drawn women. The plot does have some predictable elements: for example, from the time Harald first encounters a tiny wood-and-linen biplane called a Hornet Moth, half-rotted and stored away in a Danish barn, we know that it will heroically take to the skies. Then, when the very outcome of the war begins to turn on Harald getting a certain roll of film from Denmark to England, well... you can see where things are headed. But it's great fun to watch them develop, and Follett throws in just enough unexpected shocks to keep you off balance. Though it lacks the intensity of Eye of the Needle, Follett's finest and best-known book, Hornet Flight offers generous helpings of suspense and a climax that could hardly be more satisfying. --Nicholas H. Allison

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:01 -0400)

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