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             Daddy
            by Loup Durand
            1987 
            Translated from French by J. Maxwell Brownjohn 
            This nifty, complex thriller is a true cat and mouse chase through 
            France, Switzerland, and Germany in 1942. The cat, recruited by 
            Nazis, is Gregor Laemmle, a brilliant, somewhat dissipated, 
            philosopher, who has the German army and the French police at his 
            disposal. The mouse is eleven year old multilingual genius Thomas 
            von Gall. He has memorized bank codes that access 350 million 
            dollars in gold hidden by Jews at the start of the war, money now 
            coveted by the Germans. Laemmle is to do anything he must to find 
            the boy. 
            Thomas uses his superior brain to outwit Laemmle, a difficult task 
            given the latter’s vast resources and his knack for foreseeing 
            Thomas’s every move. Likening the hunt to a challenging chess game, 
            with moves and countermoves, Laemmle bears a grudging respect for 
            the talented boy, even grows to love him. After his beloved mother 
            is killed in a trap, Thomas hates Laemmle with a fury he has never 
            known 
            Enter a third party with a vested interest in the situation: 
            American David Quartermain, who received a letter from Thomas’s 
            mother, informing him that the boy is his son and he may be the only 
            one to save him. One of a large family, said to be America’s 
            wealthiest, Quartermain has led the idle life of a rich, carefree 
            playboy, and now must get involved in a serious quest that may kill 
            him. He does an admirable job, as does Thomas, whose distrust of the 
            American grows into respect, and finally love. Suspenseful twists 
            and turns throughout lead to a satisfying ending. 
            ~ Loup Durand, 1933-1995, first published at the age of forty-two. 
            He wrote several French adventure novels under a pseudonym. Daddy 
            became an instant bestseller in France. 
            ~ A 1989 review in The New York Times took exception to the Indiana 
            Jones/James Bond heroics David Quartermain displays. Some readers no 
            doubt agree. Millions, however, loved this book. I count myself 
            among the latter. 
            ~ In 2003 a TV movie based on Daddy--Entrusted--was produced 
            (UK/France). 
            ~ Other Novels:
            The Angkor Massacre - 1983 
            Jaguar - 1990 
            The Grand Silence - 1994 
Thursday, 28 September 2023
Quick Review – Daddy
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