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Angus Ross (1) (1927–2004)

Author of The Darlington Jaunt

For other authors named Angus Ross, see the disambiguation page.

18+ Works 50 Members 2 Reviews

Series

Works by Angus Ross

The Darlington Jaunt (1983) 10 copies
The Ampurias Exchange (1976) 9 copies
Leeds Fiasco (1975) 8 copies, 1 review
The Burgos Contract (1978) 4 copies, 1 review
Hamburg Switch (1980) 3 copies
The London Assignment (1972) 2 copies
The Huddersfield Job (1971) 1 copy
Bad April (1984) 1 copy
Menwith Tangle (1982) 1 copy

Associated Works

John Creasey's Crime Collection : 1979 (1979) — Contributor — 7 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Giggal, Kenneth
Other names
Ross, Angus (pen name)
Birthdate
1927-03-19
Date of death
2004
Gender
male
Birthplace
Dewsbury, Yorkshire, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
Found a yellowing copy at a Friends of the Library sale and picked it up because I'd been to Burgos and its cathedral. Farrow doesn't spend a lot of time in Burgos but does drive all over northern Spain trying to track down and take out a sharp KGB agent who happens to be a woman. Might have helped to understand the story better if I had background knowledge of Spanish political history. But otherwise, even though this isn't my preferred genre, the book wasted no time getting started and show more Farrow appeals as an average Joe's James Bond. show less
I first read this book about thirty-five years ago, when I had just moved to Leeds as a student. Back then I enjoyed it as a fairly fast-moving adventure romp reminiscent of Desmond Bagley or Alistair Maclean. This time I was less impressed.

The book is narrated by Mark Farrow, a member of an unspecified intelligence agency, who has been called upon to investigate the leak of technological secrets from a licensed manufacturer based in Leeds. As with Bagley’s and Maclean’s, Ross’s book show more is wholly plot driven – there is no attempt to develop any of the characters. Indeed, no cliché is knowingly overlooked, and in addition to some ‘professional’ northerner’s disdain for Londoners there is a smattering of homophobia, and a gun slinging American security man.

It wasn’t all bad, though. Ross’s description of Leeds rings true to my memories of the city, and there is a marvellous description of Bryan’s fish and chip shop on Weetwood Lane (rather feebly disguised as ‘Bryant’s’ of ‘Wheetwood Lane’).

Still, time moves inexorably on and while this book may well have been in tune with its own time of the late 1970s, it hasn’t aged very well.
show less
½

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Statistics

Works
18
Also by
1
Members
50
Popularity
#316,247
Rating
3.2
Reviews
2
ISBNs
45
Languages
2

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