Wrath of the Lion is
the twelfth novel published by Harry Patterson. It was released as a hardcover
by John Long in 1964, and it is both the longest and best of Mr Patterson’s first
dozen novels. Mr Patterson’s early novels all had marvelous titles, and this is
one of my favorite. It comes from a line in William Blake’s “Proverbs of Hell”—
“The wrath of the lion is the wisdom of God.”
Neil Mallory is a
former SAS Colonel now working for British Intelligence. He is sent to a small
island in the English Channel, closer to France than England, to search for a
French submarine with a renegade crew. The L’Allouette
(ironically meaning “lark” in English) has been cruising the French coast
making mischief. It forced a boarding on a ship in the Channel and executed an
aging public prosecutor responsible for convicting several of the crews’ comrades.
Mallory’s mission: find
the L’Allouette and call in the
cavalry. Unsurprisingly, it isn’t quite as easy as it sounds. The island has
only a handful of full time residents, and the heavy, who is a self-exiled
former military officer from an old line family, seemingly knows more about
Mallory’s doings than Mallory knows about his.
Wrath of the Lion
is the most complete of Mr Patterson’s earliest work—its characters are crisply
developed (and believable—Mallory has something of a genuinely unsavory past),
its plot is linear, tricky (in a good way), and while not surprising to the 21st
century reader, it is executed with an almost flawless professionalism and
very, very entertaining. The prose is eloquent and smooth describing the action,
setting, and characters in a succinct and (somehow) economical manner—
“He took her arm. They walked to the corner and
turned into the street. It started to rain, a thin drizzle that beaded the iron
railings like silver. There was a dull, aching pain in her ankle and the old
houses floated in the fog, unreal and insubstantial, part of a dark dream from
which she had yet to awaken, and the pavement seemed to move beneath her feet.”
The setting is a
perfect fit for the period it was written. The bad guys belong to a real world
French terrorist organization referred to in the novel as the “O.A.S.,” which
is an acronym for “Organisation de l’armee secrete”; or its literal English
transaction, “Organization of the Secret Army.” The O.A.S. was a group
dedicated to keeping French colonial rule in Algeria. It, most notably, made an
assassination attempt on Charles De Gaulle in 1962.
The factual detail—sprinkled
into the narrative in small morsels—is as interesting as the plot. There is an
interesting definition of the word “karate,” a bevy of detail about 1960s
French-Algeria relations, the workings—in surprising detail—of the tiny Type
XXIII U-boat design (an undersea electric tin can), and even a perfectly placed
quote—from what I believe is Shakespeare—
“When you sup with the devil you need a long spoon.”
—which is everything
one expects from a high quality Harry Patterson novel.
Neil Mallory may seem familiar to the regular reader of Mr Patterson’s work, and for good reason. A very different Neil Mallory starred in The Last Place God Made; an incarnation that was saw him as bush pilot rather than a former SAS officer.
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