Reviews

Dark Arena by Jack Beaumont

leemac027's review

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adventurous challenging dark mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

You can tell that Jack Beaumont (nom de plume) has a background in espionage and he writes a cracking good yarn about international spy agencies, terrorism and the politics behind so many massive industries including oil and gas.

Our protagonist, Alec de Payns is again charged with trying to sort out the truth from the rumours about a potential assassination attempt on European soil - who is the target - who is behind it? But there is something else going on in the background - smoke and mirrors, spy agency against spy agency, government against government and no one telling the whole truth.

All the time Alec is confronting his own fears about his job potentially endangering his family and is this the time he should pull the plug on his career? 

The tension keeps mounting throughout until a fascinating climax that sees Alec country hopping to try and stop an attack on a major asset - but will he and his colleagues from the DGSE get there on time?

annamasaya's review

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slow-paced

2.0

jamesgg's review

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adventurous mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

pilebythebed's review

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4.0

Jack Beaumont is part of a wave of new espionage and thriller authors who have come out of the security services. John Le Carre was in the British security services but probably the best known of recent times is former head of MI5 Stella Rimington. Jack Beaumont, formerly of the French secret service, or DGSE, is one of a new crop of espionage authors that also includes former CIA officer David McCloskey (Damascus Station). Beaumont’s first book The Frenchman introduced Alec de Payns, former airforce pilot and now spy with the DGSE (the path also taken by Beaumont in his career) and revolved around a potential terrorist attack on Paris and a possible mole in the DGSE. De Payns, still affected by the events of The Frenchman, and his team are back in the follow-up Dark Arena.
Dark Arena revolves around the running of agents to uncover a multipronged plot orchestrated by Russia. An agent is killed bringing classified information back from the field but at the same time, other information is being dropped into the ears of Western security services, urging them to take action against Russia. In order to follow the trail of evidence, de Payns has to go undercover on a luxury Mediterranean yacht. Meanwhile, his team are trying to determine what other services know, who is leaking the information to them and why. All of this taking place in the shadow of a looming war in Ukraine because while the chapters do not come date stamped the action is clearly taking place in the months before Putin’s invasion.
Dark Arena is replete with spy craft – dead drops, cut outs, mobile phone tracking, secret identities and interagency bickering. All of which feels very authentic. But the only character with any depth or range is de Payns himself. And that is: agent with PTSD, worried about his family who nevertheless will see the job through. The rest are agents with fairly interchangeable roles. The action builds to a couple of action set pieces as de Payns and his team try to foil various plans but probably the tensest part of the novel is the undercover mission on board the yacht.
All of which makes Dark Arena a spy novel that is likely to me most appreciated by espionage aficionados. While others may find the amount of jargon and technobabble detracts from their ability to connect with character and plot. But for those after a book that allows them to feel that they are deep in the workings of the security services, albeit in a highly fictionalised sense, Beaumont delivers.
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