Greenmantle (novel)

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Greenmantle (novel)’

1
New Purpose John Buchan

Two British spies look out over war-torn Belgrade, and find the inspiration they need to go on with their dangerous mission.

In John Buchan’s Great War novel ‘Greenmantle’, published in 1916, Richard Hannay and Peter Pienaar are spying for the Allies, making their way under cover through occupied lands to Constantinople. At Belgrade, recently captured by Austria-Hungary, they look on the devastation of war and their hearts go out to the brave people of Serbia.

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2
Taken for a Ride John Buchan

Richard Hannay sees for himself how political activists trick decent people into supporting their quest for power.

Early in the Great War, Richard Hannay is in Constantinople, in pursuit of a German secret agent named Hilda von Einem. Hilda has duped a dreamy Muslim mystic into believing Germany shares his vision for society, and as Sandy Arbuthnot explains, that could be very bad both for the Arab world and for England.

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3
Collateral Damage John Buchan

Richard Hannay reflects on the innocent lives lost, when the lust for power or the desire for revenge makes us less than human.

It is Christmas 1915, and on a secret mission during the Great War, Richard Hannay has found refuge in a remote cottage in southern Germany. The house is kept by a desperately poor woman with three children, whose husband is away fighting the Russians. Hannay comes to realise that, unlike the German government, he does care about collateral damage.

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