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Original Title: The Rhinemann Exchange
ISBN: 9020401912
Edition Language: Dutch
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Het Rhinemann Spel Paperback | Pages: 414 pages
Rating: 3.91 | 11625 Users | 102 Reviews

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Title:Het Rhinemann Spel
Author:Robert Ludlum
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 414 pages
Published:1978 by Uitgeverij L.J. Veen B.V. (first published January 1st 1974)
Categories:Thriller. Fiction. Spy Thriller. Espionage. Mystery

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David Spaulding is the most feared and efficient Allied agent in wartime Europe. Expert, deadly and professional, he is also high on the Gestapo's 'most wanted' list. Now Spaulding has been selected by the Allied Command to transact an undercover deal in Argentina involving top secret Nazi scientific plans. The dealer is Erich Rhinemann, an exiled German Jew who is awaiting the end of the war with his millions in an impenetrable retreat near Buenos Aires. But there's something Spaulding doesn't know. The other side of the deal. And it involves the most bizarre, horrific intrigue of the Second World War ...

Rating Based On Books Het Rhinemann Spel
Ratings: 3.91 From 11625 Users | 102 Reviews

Assessment Based On Books Het Rhinemann Spel
A complex, slow and thorough wartime thriller set mainly in Argentina and Portugal, managed from London and Manhattan/Washington. Another angle on codeless special operatives of the more cultured and education kinds, requiring languages, literacy and quick wits. One of a very few attempts to show the Haganah in genuine equal espionage and sabotage, political power struggles with the major powers -fighters for a Jewish Free State to be established as compensation against the holocaust events

The Rhineman Exchange is typical Robert Ludlum, and that is not a bad thing. As is true with almost all Ludlum books, there is a deliciously convoluted plot that as a reader you have no chance to fully untangle until Ludlum does it for you in the rush of the last few chapters. The Rhineman exchange is extremely fun reading. The characters are all likable, but somewhat superhuman in their perfection. The truth is the book probably deserves another star, but there is an element about Ludlum's

Adequate, and with some fun historical details, but there's not much here beyond cliche and masculine/American exceptionalism.

Actually quite an entertaining book but the main premise just frustrated me so much that I couldn't look past it. Essentially, the nazis and the Americans are trading materials and information that would help their enemies in their war aims. It just made no sense, and annoyed me throughout. Apart from that, alright.

The Allies need German gyroscopes for their bombers. The Germans need Allied industrial diamonds for their rockets. German industrialist Erich Rhinemann arranges an exchange of goods in Buenos Aires, but someone wants to prevent David Spaulding, the American agent, from showing up. Ludlum at his best.

Actually quite an entertaining book but the main premise just frustrated me so much that I couldn't look past it. Essentially, the nazis and the Americans are trading materials and information that would help their enemies in their war aims. It just made no sense, and annoyed me throughout. Apart from that, alright.

I read this one ages ago when I was really into thrillers. Robert Ludlum was probably my favorite author in the genre although this was the only one of his books outside his Bourne trilogy I can remember reading. This was a great WW2 thriller. The hero was both badass and sympathetic and was reminiscent of Ludum's Jason Bourne in his deadly competency and in his sense of being worn down and made cynical from years of bloody covert warfare. The setting of this one (Argentina during WW2) and it's