The Ministry of Fear
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Narrated by:
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Oliver Chris
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By:
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Graham Greene
About this listen
Brought to you by Penguin.
For Arthur Rowe the charity fête was a trip back to childhood, to innocence, a welcome chance to escape the terror of the Blitz, to forget twenty years of his past and a murder. Then he guesses the weight of the cake, and from that moment on he's a hunted man, the target of shadowy killers, on the run and struggling to remember and to find the truth.
Critic reviews
What listeners say about The Ministry of Fear
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Laura Marcus
- 11-04-24
Gripping
An unusual thriller. Hadn’t heard of this book before but it was a great find. I was totally gripped. Listen in the dark for maximum enjoyment!
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- J. W Andrews
- 16-07-22
surreal or real
I thought the story gripping and liked that it wasn't clear whether it was meant to be realistic or surreal.
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- Pam
- 29-06-24
Superb
I love Graham Greene books but had never listened to this one. It was captivating from the first chapter and the narration was absolutely perfect
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- DartmoorDiva
- 31-05-24
Excellent listen
I thought I had read all Graham Greene’s work, but somehow this one had slipped through the net. What gem! Classic Greene and beautifully narrated to.
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- only me
- 27-07-22
excellent narration and story
Oliver Chris is an excellent narrator. I felt fully immersed in the tension of the story. Brilliant, loved it, going to try another Graham Greene but wished there were more with the same narrator.
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1 person found this helpful
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- Leslie
- 21-11-22
an enjoyable story and well read
Great narration that brings to life the mind and thinking of the main character. And a good story of an unfolding mystery
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- Banjoman
- 10-07-24
The Ministry of....?
This is an unusual novel from Graham Greene. The quality writing, and the admirable narration, doesn't save the storyline, which is uneven and seems to have two plots. Psychological drama or spy caper? The interesting characters within keep you mildly interested in how the story will end. For me personally, it's not in my top five Greene books to read. The film version of this book is a spy caper and more entertaining, and well worth a viewing.
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- Richard
- 17-05-20
England, cake and guilt.
Written in 1943 this is an espionage thriller set in a London during the Blitz. It satisfies most as a piece of highly-honed period styling, being a take on the late Surrealism so trendy at the time. Thus, the protagonist's tragic quest through shabby reality is set in a theatre of dream and memory. I enjoyed this fusion of pulp mystery thriller and self-conscious artiness.
The clean modernity of Greene's prose lifts the artificiality of an ornate plot clear of the sort kitschy commercial surrealism which second-raters of the time seemed prone to. You can easily imagine it as a vehicle for Hitchcock to have adapted cinematically, being full of quirky characters and scenic details and shot-through with angsty atmosphere.
However, striking though it is as a piece of pop style, as a thriller with pretentions to literary substance it doesn't quite convince. I find the artificiality of the far-fetched plot makes the deeper underlying themes of spiritual quest in a nihilistic world seem a bit contrived and pretentious. The author's constantly trying to go for a sophisticated polish which comes off as a sort of sales pitch for a dark personal consciousness. In short, the fit isn't invisible enough to achieve the ambition. You get the sneaking impression that Greene is grooving on the blackness of Greeneland a little too much to be the truly classy adult entertainment he's aiming at.
I don't know where critics place the book in the author's oeuvre, but I'd guess it's not rated as being even in the same division as his later stuff.
But if you're up for a bit of slick period pop, go for it.
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14 people found this helpful