Gérard de Villiers (1929–2013)
Author of The madmen of Benghazi
About the Author
Gérard de Villiers was born in Paris, France on December 8, 1929. After his military service, he wrote for France Soir and other newspapers in the 1950s. During a reporting assignment in Tunisia, he agreed to do a favor for a French intelligence officer and discovered he was a pawn in an show more assassination scheme. His first novel, S.A.S. in Istanbul, was published in 1965 and became the first book in the S.A.S. series, which may be the longest-running fiction series ever written by a single author. In recent years, he would write five books a year. His last book, La Vengeance du Kremlin, was published in October 2013 and was his 200th book. He died of cancer on October 31, 2013 at the age of 83. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Gerard de Villiers, poses during a portrait session in Paris, France on 03/10/1993
Series
Works by Gérard de Villiers
Manip à Zagreb (SAS) 4 copies
L'affaire Kirsanov 3 copies
L'Apprentie sorcière 2 copies
Ρωμαϊκή εκδίκηση 2 copies
MORT AUX CHATS (LA) 2 copies
Le jeu du cavalier 1 copy
El asunto Karsinov 1 copy
Statuia ucigasa 1 copy
Drama på Bahama 1 copy
Όπλα για το Χαρτούμ 1 copy
SAS: il gioco dei potenti 1 copy
Croisade en Birmanie 1 copy
Terror i Tokyo 1 copy
Revolution i Sydamerika 1 copy
Den forsvundne agent 1 copy
Jagten på Lin Piao 1 copy
Operation CX 3 1 copy
Massemord i Rio 1 copy
Strengt fortroligt 1 copy
Russisk diplomati 1 copy
Buddha's tand 1 copy
Afhopper til salg 1 copy
Gidslet 1 copy
Døden i New York 1 copy
Hurtig død 1 copy
Stop revolutionen 1 copy
Hævnens engel 1 copy
Planlagt mord 1 copy
Jutro w Bagdadzie 1 copy
Spie sull'altra sponda 1 copy
Chi dice Sikh 1 copy
SAS: Febbre spagnola 1 copy
Morire alla giornata 1 copy
Il drago della droga 1 copy
Sevizie a domicilio 1 copy
SAS: L'ostaggio di Teheran 1 copy
SAS Avenue 1 copy
Una valigia tira l'altra 1 copy
Sua Altezza Segretissima 1 copy
Chi di spia ferisce... 1 copy
Sua Altezza Serenissima 1 copy
Αναταραχές στον Παναμά 1 copy
SAS 1 copy
Sas vede nero 1 copy
Selvmords missionen 1 copy
Blodig flugt 1 copy
Υπόθεση Κιρσάνοφ 1 copy
Le Grand Prêtre des Ardennes 1 copy
Sas en Estambul 1 copy
Les savants de Selena 1 copy
Le libérateur de Jedo 1 copy
MAFIA DROGURILOR 1 copy
COMOARA NEGUSULUI 1 copy
Παγίδα στη Βουδαπέστη 1 copy
SAS: renegade 1 copy
SAS:droga in the rocks 1 copy
SAS: inverno spia 1985 1 copy
SAS: a morte la Serbia 1 copy
SAS: l'occhio della vedova 1 copy
SAS: il colonnello Chang 1 copy
SAS: trappola ucraina 1 copy
SAS Op de Caribische toer 1 copy
SAS Een Onmogelijke Opdracht 1 copy
SAS Granaten Op Grenada 1 copy
SAS 36 Furie à Belfast 1 copy
L'énigme du dormant 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- de Villiers, Gérard
- Legal name
- Adam de Villiers, Jacques Gérard Marie
- Birthdate
- 1929-12-08
- Date of death
- 2013-10-31
- Gender
- male
- Education
- Sciences Politiques
- Occupations
- Journaliste
Romancier (Policier)
Editeur - Organizations
- Editions Gérard de Villiers (Co-gérant, 1988, Gérant_et_PDG, 1998)
Minute (Journaliste)
Rivarol (Journaliste)
France-Dimanche (Journaliste)
Paris-Presse (Journaliste) - Relationships
- de Villiers, Jacques Adam, (father)
- Cause of death
- Cancer du pancréas
- Nationality
- France
- Birthplace
- Paris, France
- Places of residence
- Paris, Île-de-France, France
- Place of death
- 16e arrondissement, Paris, Île-de-France, France
- Burial location
- Cimetière de Passy, Paris, Île-de-France, France (Division 10)
- Associated Place (for map)
- Paris, France
Members
Reviews
This was absolutely terrible. In a word: Trashy James Bond -- the uninspired kind you want to avoid.
The main character in this series, Malko, is an Austrian nobleman who moonlights as a freelance special agent for the CIA, who drop him into various spy/thriller scenarios. In this instalment he is posing as a US Aid worker dealing with refugees in Cambodia, when the Khmers Rouges are besieging Phnom Penh. Malko is shown around the city, which seems little more than a giant black market where show more decadence, alcohol, opium and prostitutes make up daily life. Corruption is rife as Cambodian state forces, the Americans and the Khmers Rouges are making deals behind the scenes.
At least the bare trappings of a by-the-numbers spy thriller are there. The Big Bad is an evil general; his main henchman is an amputee named Phuong, who is an admirable fighter despite the lack of his legs. And of course Malko is introduced to a number of sexy asian ladies (SALs), who are all a little bit mysterious, very pretty with small breasts, and upon meeting Malko they all default to the role of helpful assistant who intensely desires the sexy white male.
If this sounds like a setup for a minor James Bond film with at least a modicum of promise, the book is actually much worse. De Villiers writes with a limited vocabulary that is repeated ad nauseam (guns fire only in rafales, explosions déchiquetent people). There are awkward sex scenes of questionable Gary-Stu quality. The Big Bad is said to be the Big Bad, but is not given a chance to show his evilness; and so there is no real tension. Several non-white characters express themselves in even less than Hulk Speak, particularly a Chinese action girl with the very un-Chinese name of Monivanh (number one = "good”, number ten = "bad”; no sweat / beaucoup sweat = "no problem / big heap problem”, tic-tic = ”have sex”). And worst of all: Malko is almost entirely passive in this book and takes virtually no initiative. For most of the book he gets carted around by CIA agents and by the SALs and is introduced to various people; he doesn’t speak any of the local languages, which means that many setups for the grand finale go through an intermediary -- the aforementioned agents and SALs; his assassination attempt (really his only action scene) goes wrong in the clumsiest of untrained amateur ways and a SAL has to rescue him; his master plan is executed by someone else; and in his final action scene his weapon, his transport, his intel and his exit strategy have all been handed to him by a SAL. Some action hero! In fact, if Malko were any random red-blooded male who imagines themselves capable of withstanding a little torturebefore the cavalry show up , this book's plot would not only play out exactly the same, but there’d be at least some kind of excuse for Malko’s lack of initiative.
And then there are facepalm-worthy passages such as the following. After Monivanh has fought off evil henchman Phuong (Malko, of course, was knocked semi-unconscious almost immediately), she takes Malko back to his hotel and gives him a divine blowjob which, incidentally, involves a cup of tea. Then we get this (my translation):
Right.
This is a shockingly bad book -- the kind of trashy that makes me feel I wasted my time on it. It doesn’t really use the tropes of flashy spy fiction efficiently, it merely mentions their external trappings and bets that that will be enough to keep people interested. I would say it even fails to clear the very, very low bar that is cheap self-insert fantasy: its protagonist is too passive and the stakes he faces are too low. show less
The main character in this series, Malko, is an Austrian nobleman who moonlights as a freelance special agent for the CIA, who drop him into various spy/thriller scenarios. In this instalment he is posing as a US Aid worker dealing with refugees in Cambodia, when the Khmers Rouges are besieging Phnom Penh. Malko is shown around the city, which seems little more than a giant black market where show more decadence, alcohol, opium and prostitutes make up daily life. Corruption is rife as Cambodian state forces, the Americans and the Khmers Rouges are making deals behind the scenes.
At least the bare trappings of a by-the-numbers spy thriller are there. The Big Bad is an evil general; his main henchman is an amputee named Phuong, who is an admirable fighter despite the lack of his legs. And of course Malko is introduced to a number of sexy asian ladies (SALs), who are all a little bit mysterious, very pretty with small breasts, and upon meeting Malko they all default to the role of helpful assistant who intensely desires the sexy white male.
If this sounds like a setup for a minor James Bond film with at least a modicum of promise, the book is actually much worse. De Villiers writes with a limited vocabulary that is repeated ad nauseam (guns fire only in rafales, explosions déchiquetent people). There are awkward sex scenes of questionable Gary-Stu quality. The Big Bad is said to be the Big Bad, but is not given a chance to show his evilness; and so there is no real tension. Several non-white characters express themselves in even less than Hulk Speak, particularly a Chinese action girl with the very un-Chinese name of Monivanh (number one = "good”, number ten = "bad”; no sweat / beaucoup sweat = "no problem / big heap problem”, tic-tic = ”have sex”). And worst of all: Malko is almost entirely passive in this book and takes virtually no initiative. For most of the book he gets carted around by CIA agents and by the SALs and is introduced to various people; he doesn’t speak any of the local languages, which means that many setups for the grand finale go through an intermediary -- the aforementioned agents and SALs; his assassination attempt (really his only action scene) goes wrong in the clumsiest of untrained amateur ways and a SAL has to rescue him; his master plan is executed by someone else; and in his final action scene his weapon, his transport, his intel and his exit strategy have all been handed to him by a SAL. Some action hero! In fact, if Malko were any random red-blooded male who imagines themselves capable of withstanding a little torture
And then there are facepalm-worthy passages such as the following. After Monivanh has fought off evil henchman Phuong (Malko, of course, was knocked semi-unconscious almost immediately), she takes Malko back to his hotel and gives him a divine blowjob which, incidentally, involves a cup of tea. Then we get this (my translation):
Flirtant avec l’infarctus, Malko était incapable de répondre. C’était encore plus éprouvant que le combat avec Phuong… Monivanh avait vraiment des ressources très diversifiées. Elle savait peut-être même faire la cuisine...
Feeling close to a coronary, Malko was unable to respond. This was even more grueling than the fight with Phuong… Monivanh’s skills really were quite diverse. Perhaps she even knew how to cook...
Right.
This is a shockingly bad book -- the kind of trashy that makes me feel I wasted my time on it. It doesn’t really use the tropes of flashy spy fiction efficiently, it merely mentions their external trappings and bets that that will be enough to keep people interested. I would say it even fails to clear the very, very low bar that is cheap self-insert fantasy: its protagonist is too passive and the stakes he faces are too low. show less
Tipica storia alla SAS: veloce e godibile, attenta a fotografare bene il paesaggio e il contesto politico più che nello sviluppare una storia intricata e complessa. La narrazione avanza più per continue complicazioni che per altro, scorre abbastanza bene senza particolari punti morti, e presenta almeno due avvenimenti abbastanza evocativi (il rapimento iniziale da parte della monaca ed il suicidio di un personaggio più avanti nella storia). I personaggi sono tutti caratterizzati più per show more tratti particolari che per approfondimento psicologico, riservato solamente a Flor e Laura Iglesias. Una volta di più, fallisce il tentativo di rendere SAS un personaggio empatico e in cui è facile immedesimarsi, la sua freddezza, in questo caso, è controproducente. show less
I recently rediscovered the spy adventures of Prince Malko Linge. They were huge in Germany where about 150 novels were published and even bigger in France where more than 200 were written, usually about four a year, until the author's relatively recent death.
In English only a handful were ever translated in the 1970s.
Malko Linge is an Austrian prince who in order to renovate his castle occasionally works for the CIA all around the world. Though usually mainly remembered for its often show more excessive sex scenes what impressed me most are their incredible attention to detail when it comes to the international locations. It's clear that author was personally familiar with most of the places he wrote about. And the books also have an often surprisingly cynical world view.
DEATH ON THE RIVER KWAI may not be the best of the recent Malko reads and loses a bit of impact by Malko being constantly left in the dark when searching for a missing friend in Thailand but it's still a wonderful example of an espionage series I want to continue exploring more of. show less
In English only a handful were ever translated in the 1970s.
Malko Linge is an Austrian prince who in order to renovate his castle occasionally works for the CIA all around the world. Though usually mainly remembered for its often show more excessive sex scenes what impressed me most are their incredible attention to detail when it comes to the international locations. It's clear that author was personally familiar with most of the places he wrote about. And the books also have an often surprisingly cynical world view.
DEATH ON THE RIVER KWAI may not be the best of the recent Malko reads and loses a bit of impact by Malko being constantly left in the dark when searching for a missing friend in Thailand but it's still a wonderful example of an espionage series I want to continue exploring more of. show less
So this guy has written something like 200 novels mostly about this master seducer/spy, and during his life cultivated contacts in various intelligence agencies so his books were supposed to be super realistic. This is the first, I think, to be translated into English.
Terrorists try to shoot down a passenger jet carrying Libyan prince Ibrahim al-Senussi and his companion, of course a beautiful English model. They fail. The CIA and British intelligence want to place al-Senussi at the head of show more the Libyan government, after the fall of Qaddafi, and work out an arrangement where he goes from Cairo to Libya, somehow to become leader. al-Senussi is not cut out for this, is much more interested in sex with the model, and it becomes a matter of getting him out of Benghazi and at the same time taking out the master revolutionary who is there.
The book ends up being more interesting than it seems like it's going to be. The first page is very cheesy, and the frequent sex scenes are pretty ludicrous. But the action scenes work out well, and there's a fair amount of suspense as it moves along. It all adds up to not a whole lot, though. show less
Terrorists try to shoot down a passenger jet carrying Libyan prince Ibrahim al-Senussi and his companion, of course a beautiful English model. They fail. The CIA and British intelligence want to place al-Senussi at the head of show more the Libyan government, after the fall of Qaddafi, and work out an arrangement where he goes from Cairo to Libya, somehow to become leader. al-Senussi is not cut out for this, is much more interested in sex with the model, and it becomes a matter of getting him out of Benghazi and at the same time taking out the master revolutionary who is there.
The book ends up being more interesting than it seems like it's going to be. The first page is very cheesy, and the frequent sex scenes are pretty ludicrous. But the action scenes work out well, and there's a fair amount of suspense as it moves along. It all adds up to not a whole lot, though. show less
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Statistics
- Works
- 342
- Also by
- 1
- Members
- 1,828
- Popularity
- #14,075
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 35
- ISBNs
- 622
- Languages
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