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The star of Istanbul : a Christopher Marlowe Cobb thriller  Cover Image Book Book

The star of Istanbul : a Christopher Marlowe Cobb thriller / Robert Olen Butler. --

Summary:

Christopher Marlowe ("Kit") Cobb, an American war correspondent reporting on World War I, has been tasked to follow a man named Brauer, a German intellectual and possible covert SS agent, into perilous waters aboard the ship Lusitania, as the man is believed to hold information vital to the war effort. Aboard the Lusitania on its fateful voyage, Cobb becomes smitten with famed actress Selene Bourgani, who for some reason appears to be working with German Intelligence.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780802121554 (hc.)
  • ISBN: 0802121551 (hc.)
  • Physical Description: 369 p. ; 23 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Mysterious Press, c2013.
Subject: Lusitania (Steamship) > Fiction.
War correspondents > Fiction.
World War, 1914-1918 > Fiction.
London (England) > History > Fiction.
Istanbul (Turkey) > History > Fiction.
Genre: Spy stories.
Suspense fiction.
Historical fiction.

Available copies

  • 3 of 4 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 0 of 1 copy available at Castlegar Public Library.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 4 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Castlegar Public Library FIC BUT (Text) 35146001858422 Fiction Volume hold Checked out 2025-04-08

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2013 November #2
    *Starred Review* When we last saw Christopher Marlowe ("Kit") Cobb, war correspondent, secret agent, and all-around soldier of fortune, he was in civil-war-torn Mexico, cavorting with Pancho Villa (The Hot Country, 2012). Now, in 1915, with WWI raging, and the neutral U.S. edging toward involvement, he's aboard the doomed Lusitania, tracking a German American who may be a secret-service agent and falling under the spell of a famous actress, Selene Bourgani, who has secrets of her own. After the Lusitania meets its watery grave, Kit lands in London, where he continues to shadow the actress (well, not exactly: he's fallen in love with her and does most of his "shadowing" in her bed). Meanwhile, there's a German assassin out there somewhere called Der Wolf, whose eyes may be on both Selene and Kit. The Wolf's trail leads to Istanbul, where Selene's motives gradually become clear and where Kit lands in a blood-soaked finale. Butler juggles a lot of elements here, in terms of both plotting, as double and triple crosses merge like lanes in a traffic roundabout, and tone, as the novel commingles character-driven historical fiction with melodrama and swashbuckling action. Somehow, though, it all works; on one level, Butler is playing with genre conventions in an almost mad-scientist manner, but at the same time, he holds the reader transfixed, like a kid at a Saturday matinee. Copyright 2013 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2013 October
    Leaphorn and Chee return

    Big shoes! Those are what Anne Hillerman has to fill in taking over for her father, the late best-selling  writer Tony Hillerman, beloved by critics and readers alike for his iconic Navajo mysteries, which spanned a whopping 36 years. Longtime Hillerman (père) protagonists Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee are both on hand for Anne Hillerman's debut novel, Spider Woman's Daughter, but the spotlight falls on Bernie Manuelito, Chee's policewoman wife. Manuelito is at the scene when Leaphorn is shot in the head in the parking lot of a local restaurant. As she leans over the flagging Leaphorn, she makes him a promise: She will find the shooter and bring him to justice. As a witness to the shooting, she is immediately relieved of duty pending further notice. This will not stop her from keeping her promise, however—although she will have to stay under the radar to achieve that end. So seamless is the writing transition from father to daughter, it is easy to forget that one is reading Anne, not Tony. That said, Anne brings a welcome female perspective to the table, fleshing out several of the female supporting characters but never forgetting the importance of the two main players who define the series. Nicely done on every level.

    007 IS FOREVER
    Big shoes, redux! Certainly the premier espionage franchise, either in book form or on the silver screen, has to be James Bond. For years, moviegoers have squabbled over the relative merits of Connery, Moore, Craig, et al., regarding their portrayals of the suave 007. Several luminaries have penned "continuation works" to Ian Fleming's series—Robert Markham (a pseudonym for Kingsley Amis), Jeffery Deaver and John Gardner are just a few—some hewing closer to the original than others. The latest writer to take on this daunting task is William Boyd, the Whitbread Award-winning author of A Good Man in Africa. Solo is set in 1969 on the eve of Bond's 45th birthday. The title refers to Bond's going off the radar on a mission of his own choosing, a deadly tri-continental undertaking, consequences be damned. Naturally, given Bond's reputation, there is a woman at hand, and then another, although perhaps not the sort of overwrought creations one might have expected from Fleming. Boyd's Bond is altogether darker and more introspective than Fleming's, and more cerebral than physical. There are no Aston Martins with flamethrowers, no rocket trips to the farthest reaches of Earth's atmosphere, just a straight-up spy story that brings new maturity to an old favorite.

    AN ABSENCE IN ICELAND
    Arnaldur Indridason's Black Skies may well be the most complicated book I have ever tried to review. For starters, Inspector Erlendur is still on hiatus—never mind that he was the main character in the first six books in this series—and his presence hovers over the story like some brooding ghost. He was also M.I.A. in the previous installment, Outrage, in which the investigation was led by his colleague, Detective Elínborg, and I'm sure many devoted readers assumed she was being groomed by Indridason as Erlendur's replacement. Not so fast, though: This time out, the spotlight is on Sigurdur Óli, who is at a parallel level to Elínborg, although by no means her equal. To further complicate matters, the timeframe of Outrage is the same as that of Black Skies, so there is inevitably some narrative overlap between the two, not the least of which concerns Erlendur's curious absence from center stage. Then there is the storyline, which morphs from a sex scandal to a murder to the high-level (and highly questionable) banking practices that precipitated Iceland's financial debacle a few years back. Complex? Yes, indeed. Confusing? Not at all. Indridason weaves an intricate tapestry and demands attention from the reader, but the payoff is well worth the effort.

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    It's 1915. World War I has been under way since the previous year, but America has thus far avoided the fray. As Robert Olen Butler's The Star of Istanbul opens, war-correspondent-turned-spy Christopher Marlowe Cobb boards an ocean liner in New York, bound for Liverpool. The name of the ship: ­Lusitania. History buffs know the ship never made it to its destination; it was torpedoed by German U-boats off the coast of Ireland, and some 1,200 lives were lost. The incident is credited with hastening America's entrance into the war. Cobb has been tasked with shadowing Walter Brauer, a suspected German spy. Complicating matters is Cobb's intense attraction to another fellow passenger, actress Selene Bourgani, who may be a German agent, too. The action finds the three main players dancing their way across the vast European stage from London to Istanbul. This will be no simple matter for Cobb, as the Ottoman Empire (modern-day Turkey) has taken up with the Germans, and there is no safe haven to be found there for Allied spies. The Star of Istanbul has it all: history galore, exotic foreign settings, a world-weary yet engaging protagonist, villains in abundance and a romance worthy of Bogart and Bergman.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2013 September #1
    The second foray into crime fiction by Pulitzer-winning novelist Butler features a big shipwreck, a little seduction and a lot of chatter. Following Mexico-set The Hot Country (2012), Butler puts journalist/secret agent Christopher "Kit" Marlowe Cobb on the ill-fated ocean liner the Lusitania, whose sinking by a German U-boat in 1915 helped thrust the United States into World War I. Cobb is ostensibly tailing a German agent while traveling in style across the Atlantic, but his attention is equally drawn to Selene, a silent-film star with whom he starts a fling. If that's behavior not necessarily befitting a secret agent, it does draw Cobb further into a tangled plot involving codebreaking, rare books and alliances with Turkish leaders. Butler is an excellent observer of interior psychological detail--he enjoys having Cobb test conversational patter for hidden meanings--and his fine description of the Lusitania's demise shows he can write action-packed scenes as well. Even so, this is a wordy book for one that aspires to the crisp efficiency of a thriller. Cobb can deliver noirish tough-guy patter, particularly when he's tangling with a goon or bedding Selene, but his scene descriptions can often feel like overstuffed sofas of detail and conversational analysis. That's unfortunate, since underneath that ornamentation is a thoughtful study of the moral obligation to violence: In the same way the Lusitania incident forced the U.S. off the sidelines, Cobb is routinely put in positions where doing nothing is the wrong choice, a point that hits home toward the novel's end as he witnesses evidence of the Turkish mass slaughter of Armenians. Though the story drags somewhat, it's a pleasure to watch Cobb clear away layer upon layer of scheming and disguises to expose some ugly truths about humanity. A respectable work of historical crime fiction, a form Butler is still mastering. Copyright Kirkus 2013 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2013 May #2

    In 2012, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Butler successfully changed pace by launching a thriller series featuring Christopher Marlowe Cobb, war correspondent and American spy. In the second in the series, Cobb is charged with following German intellectual and putative spy Brauer onto the decks of the Lusitania, also encountering a gorgeous actress with a mission.

    [Page 51]. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2013 August #1

    Butler's sequel to TheHot Country begins with war correspondent and part-time government agent Christopher Marlowe "Kit" Cobb preparing for a journey to cover the Great War in Europe. With America still neutral, he doesn't anticipate any problems as he boards the Lusitania. His mission is to follow a German agent and discover who the agent is meeting and what their plans are. Also aboard is exotic leading silent-film actress Selene Bourgani. After their ship is torpedoed, the survivors move on to London where the intrigue deepens, and Cobb witnesses one of the first air raids in history. He follows his suspects east toward Turkey and an exciting climax in the capital city. VERDICT Butler uses period details, especially regarding the motives of the various characters, and cameos of actual historic personalities to good effect without weighing down the tale. He has written an exciting thriller with plenty of action, romance, and danger set against a compelling setting. Fans of historical spy fiction will enjoy this fast-paced journey through a world at war. [See Prepub Alert, 4/22/13.]—Dan Forrest, Western Kentucky Univ. Libs., Bowling Green

    [Page 83]. (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2013 August #1

    Set in 1915, Butler's busy second adventure featuring Christopher Marlowe Cobb (after 2012's The Hot Country) takes the intrepid reporter, who doubles as an American spy, to war-torn Europe. Cobb travels on the Lusitania, where he's watching Walter Brauer, a suspected German agent. Cobb also keeps an eye on hot-blooded film star Selene Bourgani, who attracts his amorous attentions, despite rumors that she, too, works for the Kaiser. When the Lusitania is torpedoed off the Irish coast, Cobb leaps into the ocean with Bourgani in his arms, but his job is far from over. He accompanies Bourgani to Turkey, where she has a score to settle involving two great empires. Butler impresses with his exceptional attention to historical detail, particularly aboard the Lusitania, but the heavy doses of melodrama may put off some thriller readers. Others may find Cobb's ego and fearless approach to danger tiresome. Agent: Warren Frazier, John Hawkins & Associates. (Oct.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2013 PWxyz LLC

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