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N or M?
- Narrated by: Hugh Fraser
- Length: 5 hrs and 41 mins
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Summary
Another audiobook in the Tommy & Tuppence series.
It is World War II, and while the RAF struggles to keep the Luftwaffe at bay, Britain faces an even more sinister threat from ‘the enemy within’ – Nazis posing as ordinary citizens.
With pressure mounting, the Intelligence service appoints two unlikely spies, Tommy and Tuppence Beresford. Their mission: to seek out a man and a woman from among the colourful guests at Sans Souci, a seaside hotel. But this assignment is no stroll along the promenade. After all, N and M have just murdered Britain’s finest agent…
Critic reviews
"As ingenious as ever." (Guardian)
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What listeners say about N or M?
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Overall
- Kirstine
- 18-06-08
Lively tale, excellently read
This is one of the 'Partners in Crime' stories involving a sleuthing couple formerly employed by the British Secret Service during the First World War and here re-recruited to help flush out a Fifth Column conspiracy during the Second World War. It's an engaging story with twists and turns and a surprising denouement. As usual, Hugh Fraser does sterling service as the reader cleverly changing the pitch and accent of his voice to convince as young or old, male or female, Irish, English or German. Thoroughly enjoyable
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8 people found this helpful
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- OL
- 08-05-22
An unabridged performance
I love a good 'Aggy' - her unabridged descriptions and dialogues knocks the spots of any abridged dramatizations when read well, and Hugh Fraser does them justice.
I'm just beginning to explore the Tommy and Tuppence series and this is a delight, peppered with digs at young people's sexism and assumptions about older people.
BUT...
Does Audible HAVE to come in so soon and so loud after the reading ends. IT'S VERY INTRUSIVE AND BREAKS THE SPELL!!!
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3 people found this helpful
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- FictionFan
- 03-07-22
Careless talk costs lives…
It’s 1940, and Tommy and Tuppence are desperate to help the war effort in any way they can. But they’re in their forties now, and Tommy is seen as too old for the armed services while Tuppence’s old skills from her days as a nurse in WW1 don’t seem to be in demand either. Tommy gets in touch with Mr Carter, now retired from the Secret Service, and asks if he can pull any strings. And then a Mr Grant shows up, ostensibly offering Tommy a dull but useful clerical role in Scotland. But when Tuppence leaves the room, Mr Grant tells Tommy this is a cover story – really the Secret Service want him to go undercover to a boarding house in the South of England from where they believe a top Nazi spy is operating. But they don’t know who – all they know is that it’s one of two people known only by their code initials, one male, one female – N or M. It’s vital the spy should be uncovered – the whole war depends on it! The operation is top secret and no one must know he’s going, not even Tuppence. So off Tommy goes, but when he gets there he’s in for a big surprise when he meets one of his fellow guests – Mrs Blenkinsop, who bears an uncanny resemblance to his eavesdropping wife…
I’m afraid when Ms Christie gets into espionage plots they become so convoluted and unlikely that I’m always left feeling if this was the best the Nazis could do the only wonder is they didn’t lose more quickly! But I don’t care – Tommy and Tuppence, especially Tuppence, are so much fun to spend time with that the plot can be as silly as it likes and I’ll still love the book! And there’s so much in it about the anxieties that would have been forefront in the minds of people on the Home Front that I expect it didn’t seem nearly so unbelievable when it was published in 1941 – Fifth Columnists, parachuting spies, those perfidious Irish, Nazi sympathisers, German refugees who might be spies… and all while Britain was standing alone against the mighty Nazi war machine, and victory was far from certain. As would have been the case for so many people too old to serve, Tommy and Tuppence’s two children – adults now – are in the forces, and both doing jobs requiring a lot of secrecy so that their parents don’t even know where they are much of the time. It’s partly to take their minds off this constant worry that makes them both so keen to be doing something – anything – to help.
The boarding house is filled with a variety of characters who all look innocent enough, but equally could all be N or M. There’s the retired military man who seems to despair of democratic Britain and feels the Nazis are doing quite a good job of running Germany – but is he really a Nazi sympathiser or just a grumpy old man? Is the Irishwoman loyal to Britain despite her husband’s Irish nationalism during WW1? Is the young German really a refugee from a regime he hates, or is he an infiltrator? What about the hypochondriacal man and his put-upon wife – are they what they seem? Surely the mother evacuated from London with her young child must be just what she claims? That was what made the idea of the Fifth Column so frightening – once you accept the idea as possible, then anyone could be a Nazi spy. And so every careless word could lead to death or disaster for our troops. Christie captures this feeling of paranoia very well.
Despite all this serious stuff, there’s also enough humour in it to stop the tone from becoming too dark. The banter between Tommy and Tuppence is always entertaining, and here there's an added element in that we see how their children treat them as if they were ancient and past it, while Tommy and Tuppence in reality are doing a far more important and secret job than either of them. Albert makes an appearance, and while it’s always fun to see him, sadly he follows in the tradition of Lord Wimsey’s Bunter or Campion’s Lugg – the comedy working class character who adores and idolises his master or mistress. Albert actually refers to Tommy as his master, for goodness sake! So I’m glad he plays a fairly minor role, and am devoutly thankful that neither Poirot nor Miss Marple saw the need for a working class sidekick.
Hugh Fraser is as wonderful as always. Here he gets the chance to play loads of different characters, from grumpy old men to beautiful, moody young women, not to mention the toddler who speaks mostly in baby language and gurgles, and he handles them all brilliantly! So, despite my niggles with the plot, this is a hugely enjoyable listening experience, and Tommy and Tuppence are as much fun as ever!
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- Kindle Customer
- 04-05-21
Rollicking spy story
Great story well read as always. Story flows well and characters are all in keeping with the period.
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- MissReilly
- 17-01-21
Very fun listen
Great story, easy to listen to. Likable characters and I didn't guess who the villains were.
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1 person found this helpful
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- T Alexander
- 28-02-20
Full of twists and turns, keeps you wanting more
Not quite as light as the previous tommy&tuppence, but they're funny, clever and in love.
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- SpaceAgeRobot
- 30-01-24
Lovely narration, great voice acting.
I loved hearing an Agatha Christie that isn't first and foremost a country house murder mystery.
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- Azrael
- 30-12-23
Lovely story
N or M is a Tommy & Tuppence story by Agatha Christie. This version is brilliantly read by Hugh Fraser (Captain Hastings to David Suchet's Poirot). It is set during the second world war. Hugh Fraser is great at narrating the story.
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- Amazon Customer
- 30-10-23
Loved it!
It was an absolute pleasure listening to this book by the one and only Captain Hastings :)
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- AmandaJane
- 19-06-23
Agatha Christie as always Brilliant
As always this narration by Hugh Fraser is wonderful. His vocalisation of the different characters is clear and realistic.
loved everything about it.
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