Sad
Wind
is a familiar story to readers of Jack Higgins.
It has a similar plot to both the The
Khufra Run, and The Keys of Hell,
but while it is familiar, it is a very enjoyable read. Mark Hagen is a fallen American naval officer
who, with his boat Hurrier, makes a
living smuggling, gun running, and illegally pearling. When the novel opens Hagen is on the
Portuguese Island of Macao; Hurrier was
impounded by customs, and Hagen is down to his last few petakas without any way
to get his boat back, or earn a living.
Hagen’s prospects change when he rescues a beautiful
Indo-Chinese (think Vietnamese) girl from two attackers in a rough part of
Macao. The girl’s name is Rose Graham,
and she tells Hagen she was meeting a friend about retrieving $250,000 of
sunken gold when she was attacked. Her
father was smuggling the gold out of North Vietnam and his boat sank in the
Kwai marshes. Hagen quickly devises a
plan to retrieve the gold, but it all hinges on getting is boat out impound,
and finding a willing financier.
Sad Wind has all of the elements of a solid 1950s adventure novel. It includes the requisite communist plot; in this case a Russian named Kossoff who wants the gold for himself, and his Chinese helpers. There is an array of underworld characters including Charlie Beale, owner of a casino, and Clara Boydell, madam of the best “house” in Macao. The plot is intricate, and the prose is pure Higgins—stark, tight, smooth, and surprisingly atmospheric.
Sad Wind has all of the elements of a solid 1950s adventure novel. It includes the requisite communist plot; in this case a Russian named Kossoff who wants the gold for himself, and his Chinese helpers. There is an array of underworld characters including Charlie Beale, owner of a casino, and Clara Boydell, madam of the best “house” in Macao. The plot is intricate, and the prose is pure Higgins—stark, tight, smooth, and surprisingly atmospheric.
“When
Hagen emerged from the gambling casino at the back of Charle Beale’s café he
was drunk. He heard the door click into
place behind him and for a moment he stood swaying as the cold night air cut
into his lungs.”
There are also some really neat cultural references from
the 1950s. Hagen hands out a Benzedrine—an
amphetamine better known as a bennie—to Rose and says, “[T]hey’re harmless.” When
they are deciding where to run with the gold Hagen says, “Not England—killed by taxes these days,” which foreshadows Mr
Patterson’s hasty move to the Isle of Jersey when The Eagle Has Landed pushed his income into the millions. There is also what appears to be an error in
the text when Mark Hagen refers to Ireland as his childhood home, which is
rather odd for an American—
“For
a moment he shivered as he remembered stories he had heard as a child of fairy
pools back home in Ireland…”
Sad Wind from the Sea is Harry Patterson’s
earliest novel, but it is really very good.
And while it is familiar, and Mr Patterson does have a tendency to
repeat himself, the familiarity didn’t take anything from the novel or my
enjoyment of the story. It is similar to
some of the early Gold Medal adventure titles; specifically Wade Miller’s Devil May Care. If you enjoy the old style adventure novels,
or just Jack Higgins, you will have a good time with this title.
1 comment:
Hi Ben I think I read this post back soon after it was written, but I was in a Jack Higgins recovery phase at the time and I wasn't sure if I had read the book and forgotten it or if I wanted to be such a completist. Finally tracked down an old British library copy and glad I have now read it. It was surprisingly mature. There were some rough edges, but the early seventies Jack Higgins/James Graham style seems to be mostly in place already. I know he revisited some of his books later, but if this was untouched then it was a remarkable preview of his potential and the possibilities of being an even better and more interesting writer
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