
Spies
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Narrated by:
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Martin Jarvis
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By:
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Michael Frayn
About this listen
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Critic reviews
"A compelling story about secrecy and betrayal." (Booklist)
"As it plays out to a surprising denouement, this enigmatic melodrama will keep readers' attention firmly in hand." (Publishers Weekly)
"Martin Jarvis's performance is intelligent, precise, and brilliantly nuanced. He captures all of Frayn's sardonic humor, as well as his more serious moments of philosophizing." (AudioFile)
What listeners say about Spies
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Jean
- 12-03-12
WWII home front story
This story is intelligent, suspenseful, poignant and told from one of the most genuine "child's points-of-view" I've ever read. The reader is terrific and his ability to differentiate the characters is amazing. He never sounds childish but invests the reading with a child's determination and earnestness. I loved it.
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- David
- 06-04-12
Wonderful listening
What made the experience of listening to Spies the most enjoyable?
This is a wonderful story, very well read.
It is the book that Ian McEwen wished he wrote!
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Vered
- 09-25-08
Touching and interesting
Touching story, mostly recommended for listeners who appreciate plots surrounding civil life during World War II.
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
- Needles
- 01-18-13
What a beautiful piece of writing
What did you like best about this story?
What a beautiful piece of writing. The title is only slightly, wryly ironic as I found this to be a Rite Of Passage story, and a beautifully evoked one at that. To say that the bulk of the story is told in flashback would be to put it too crudely but technically speaking I suppose it it. It's as much about the excruciating nuances of the English class system, the general awkwardness of youth and the fallibility of memory itself as it is about the events themselves (a particular summer of WW2 era suburban England) , as observed once through the prism of the young Stephen and then again through the older, more bittersweet prism of the older Stephen. But this is no Waugh-esque cloying nostalgia, but something much more honest and real.
What does Martin Jarvis bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?
I would listen to Martin Jarvis read the telephone book.
(Do we even have telephone books anymore?)
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1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Kc
- 05-23-05
Gave up
This is no Copenhagen, the brillant play by Frayn. The two boys are impossibly, endlessly and tediously credulous, while one of them, the narrator, is at the same time unbelievably perceptive about the little village (wonderfully depicted -- but the book needs more than that) and its humdrum people. Not much seemed to be happening half way through, though one see where it is all leading, and no children's imagination could be that overheated. The reader, however, kept me going that far; he is wonderful. But I still gave up.
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6 people found this helpful