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Decoy (1983)

by Dudley Pope

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601416,536 (3.5)1
It is February 1942 and the war in the Atlantic looks grim for the Allied convoys. The 'Great Blackout' has started, leaving the spy centre of Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire at a loss as to what the Nazis are planning. U-boat Command has changed the Hydra cipher. The Enigma cannot be broken. Cipher experts can no longer eavesdrop on Nazi command, which leaves convoys open for attack by packs of marauding Nazi submarines. Winning the Battle of the Atlantic will surely give Hitler a final victory. And who can stop him?… (more)
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I don't imagine that this was an easy book to write.

First of all I will state that I am a great fan of Dudley Pope's Ramage series. I am half way through that series and loved each one... I have a real interest in the Napoleonic wars - land or sea warfare.

In this book, the writing is just as good as the Ramage series. Pope's problem would be to make the capture of an Enigma cypher machine from the WWII Germans interesting for 323 pages. Besides the main thread of the story, Pope paints a pretty good portrait of London during the German bombings... he often goes on tangents by describing deficiencies in protection of sailors in the RN and merchant marine....poor lifeboats and inferior life jackets among other things.

He does this especially in a long sequence when the lifeboat full of commandos is rowing in the Atlantic as a decoy hoping to attract a German U-boat. It is a boring job but Pope offsets this with these tangents.

To me the capture of the U-Boat is quite an anti-climax. Now they have to bring home the prize without getting destroyed by friend or foe since they have lost the ability to communicate their success.

There is a generous use of humour, especially in the first 100 pages. It is in the form usually as scarcasm between major characters. It got to be a bit annoying to me but it dies out a bit as the novel wore on.

Why this is not part of the YORKE series is beyond me as the main character is Ned Yorke.

Overall I did like the book despite the long relatively boring parts

I will read ALL of the Pope books I find... overall I like his writing ( )
  Lynxear | Oct 31, 2018 |
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In memory of my shipmates killed or wounded when Convoy SL 125 was caught in the 'Great Blackout'.
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Yorke pulled down his tired-looking leather bag from the luggage rack, said a polite farewell to the old lady who had sat beside him in the train for the whole tedious and gritty night journey from Glasgow to London, and joined the crowd shuffling their way to the door at the end of he corridor.
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It is February 1942 and the war in the Atlantic looks grim for the Allied convoys. The 'Great Blackout' has started, leaving the spy centre of Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire at a loss as to what the Nazis are planning. U-boat Command has changed the Hydra cipher. The Enigma cannot be broken. Cipher experts can no longer eavesdrop on Nazi command, which leaves convoys open for attack by packs of marauding Nazi submarines. Winning the Battle of the Atlantic will surely give Hitler a final victory. And who can stop him?

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