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"Masterly ... absolute bliss." - Sunday Telegraph Bernard Samson is tormented. After years on the "other side," his wife, Fiona, is finally back in his life. Cool and sophisticated, Fiona doesn't know that she finds Bernard caught between two women. With secret orders pulling him to the grim streets of Magdeburg and grave danger lurking behind every corner, Samson needs his best friend, Werner - but Werner is exiled and in disgrace. The first in Deighton's Faith, Hope, Charity trilogy, Faith show more marks the return of Bernard Samson, the enigmatic agent at the heart of Deighton's blockbuster spy series that began with Game, Set, Match. show lessTags
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Warning: this review contains spoilers for Spy Sinker and possibly Faith itself.
Bernard Samson has his wife back. Fiona has returned from her years as a "defector" behind the Iron Curtain, and they're both back in London after being debriefed in California and given a chance to recover from the climactic events of Spy Sinker. But neither of them will be the same. Bernard's affair with Gloria, a coworker half his age, has to be addressed, and Fiona has to fit back in to the world of the top floor of the Service. Then there's the kids -- how will they deal with their mother's return after believing that for years she had defected to the Communists? Bernard too is busy trying to retrieve a Russian agent named Verdi who is anxious to come show more over to the West. But from the start, the operation does not go as planned…
I knew going in that this would not be able to reach the heights of Spy Sinker, which I loved, so that perhaps helped me enjoy it more than I might have. Bernard is in fine form here, with his always-apt descriptions and not shying away from his own weaknesses (at least when other people point them out). He's starting to feel his age, though; the young field agent he's partnered with on the initial operation judges him as "certainly not young," and his kids are now 14 and 12, no longer small enough to be given piggyback rides. He also has much narrower escapes than he would like from various enemies, making him think he's lost his touch. As a middle-aged spy Bernard is a realistic creation and an endearing one too. (Am I the only one who thinks it kind of adorable that he works for the Service just like his dad, and that he works with a lot of his father's old colleagues, some of whom keep an eye out for him because they promised his father that they would?)
The humour is also very much in evidence. I almost laughed out loud at Bernard's description of Bret's desk, which was compared to Bret's women: "ultra modern, with shiny legs, black drawers and see-through top." Much of Bernard's description has a wry edge, too. And I was quite amused by his son, Billy, wanting to be a curator at a gun museum. Or a car museum.
Overall I enjoyed this book, especially the fast-paced ending, and am looking forward to the next installment in the series. show less
Bernard Samson has his wife back. Fiona has returned from her years as a "defector" behind the Iron Curtain, and they're both back in London after being debriefed in California and given a chance to recover from the climactic events of Spy Sinker. But neither of them will be the same. Bernard's affair with Gloria, a coworker half his age, has to be addressed, and Fiona has to fit back in to the world of the top floor of the Service. Then there's the kids -- how will they deal with their mother's return after believing that for years she had defected to the Communists? Bernard too is busy trying to retrieve a Russian agent named Verdi who is anxious to come show more over to the West. But from the start, the operation does not go as planned…
I knew going in that this would not be able to reach the heights of Spy Sinker, which I loved, so that perhaps helped me enjoy it more than I might have. Bernard is in fine form here, with his always-apt descriptions and not shying away from his own weaknesses (at least when other people point them out). He's starting to feel his age, though; the young field agent he's partnered with on the initial operation judges him as "certainly not young," and his kids are now 14 and 12, no longer small enough to be given piggyback rides. He also has much narrower escapes than he would like from various enemies, making him think he's lost his touch. As a middle-aged spy Bernard is a realistic creation and an endearing one too. (Am I the only one who thinks it kind of adorable that he works for the Service just like his dad, and that he works with a lot of his father's old colleagues, some of whom keep an eye out for him because they promised his father that they would?)
The humour is also very much in evidence. I almost laughed out loud at Bernard's description of Bret's desk, which was compared to Bret's women: "ultra modern, with shiny legs, black drawers and see-through top." Much of Bernard's description has a wry edge, too. And I was quite amused by his son, Billy, wanting to be a curator at a gun museum. Or a car museum.
Overall I enjoyed this book, especially the fast-paced ending, and am looking forward to the next installment in the series. show less
Len Deighton decided he still had a few more loose ends to tie up in the aftermath of Spy Sinker, and to do it he writes a whole other trilogy. After a summer in California with his returned wife being debriefed, Bernard is called back to berlin to meet with someone who claims to know him. As usual he is in the dark and has to cover his own back, but the things he does to keep himself alive and free are the things that do not endear him to his superiors, who, as we know, are a bunch of irredeemable calculating swine. Things are changing anyway, the political and the security landscapes are shifting. Some are trying to pull of an operation to cement their position. Some just want to mark time and protect their fiefdoms. Bernard has to show more navigate this, with his frend Werner, who seems to know more than he does, and his wife, damaged almost beyond repair but a London Central superstar, his lover Gloria, young and clever and nearly irresistable, and of coure hs bosses and superiors who, as we know from Spy Sinker, are not as out of touch as they appear, except for Dicky Cruyer, who's as clueless as ever, except when it comes to office politics, and even he gets outmanoeuvered sometimes. show less
Seventh in the Samson series with Bernard coping - just - with office politics and difficult personal relationships while still turning up as Man of Action. Just as well that he still has reliable Werner to talk to.
My only grouse is Deighton's assertion that each book is a stand-alone work. You really do need to know what is going on before you start and I doubt that many readers wouldn't want to know what happens next.
My only grouse is Deighton's assertion that each book is a stand-alone work. You really do need to know what is going on before you start and I doubt that many readers wouldn't want to know what happens next.
The 7th book in the Bernard Sampson series.
I thought this last trilogy of the series would be a bit flat after the action, intrigue and drama of the conclusion of “Sinker”, but no. This book delivered in entertaining and drawing me in as to how The main character, Samson, will pick up all the pieces as he tries to navigate more dilemmas and solve those lose ends from the shoot date.
Well worth a read.
I thought this last trilogy of the series would be a bit flat after the action, intrigue and drama of the conclusion of “Sinker”, but no. This book delivered in entertaining and drawing me in as to how The main character, Samson, will pick up all the pieces as he tries to navigate more dilemmas and solve those lose ends from the shoot date.
Well worth a read.
Despite not having read his earlier Samson books, I quite enjoyed this as a stand alone. I don't care enough about spy novels any more ( I used to enjoy John Le Carre) to now go back and read the others, but I appreciated Deighton's writing style and characterization.
Read so many of Bernard Samson's adventures lately that I may get one earlier book confused with another, but it seems Deighton had been stingy with adventure and answers in the books following Spy Hook. Deighton continues to build more layers of secrets upon the unresolved secrets from the previous trilogy, and adds subtle hints of more secrets. Now I have so many new questions that I'm not sure I'll remember the old ones. But I enjoy Bernard's plights, so . . . on to the next installment, Hope.
First volume in a trilogy.
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Author Information

Len Deighton was born in London, England on February 18, 1929. He served in the Royal Air Force Special Investigations Branch and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1955. Before becoming the master of the modern spy thriller, he worked as an airline steward and as an illustrator. His first novel, The Ipcress File, was published in 1962. show more His other novels include Funeral in Berlin, Berlin Game, Mexico Set, London Match, Spy Hook, Spy Line, and Spy Sinker. He also writes television plays and cookbooks. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Faith
- Original title
- Faith
- Original publication date
- 1994
- People/Characters
- Bernard Samson; Dicky Cruyer; Werner Volkmann; Bret Rensselaer; Fiona Samson; Frank Harrington
- Important places
- London, England, UK; Berlin, Germany
- First words
- "Don't miss your plane, Bernard."
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I found that in a Bible I was given recently."
- Original language*
- Inglés
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
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- ISBNs
- 38
- ASINs
- 11
































































