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Liz Smith | 06/18/2008 12:15 pm

My Name Is Liz and I'm an Addict

Liz Smith

It is terrible to have to admit you’re an addict, but here goes. I know I should be spending the summer in a hammock reading Jane Austen. Or I should go on with the latest and best version of War and Peace, which I find daunting.

But an addict is an addict and I just want to warn you that in July comes Christopher Reich’s Rules of Deception. This is a pallid title for one of the best thrillers I’ve ever read and you can look for it from Doubleday with an electronic butterfly on the cover.

2008_0617_liz_reich.jpg
Writer Reich is the best-selling guy who wrote Numbered Account and The Patriots Club. He won the International Writers Award for the best novel in 2006 and I expect he might be up again for this prize with his latest.

I don’t want to give away anything here but the mise-en-scène is mostly Switzerland and the plot affects the fate of the world when it comes to Iran, so talk about being au courant. It is! Our flawed hero is Dr. Jonathan Ransom, a member of Doctors Without Borders. As we open, he and his wife Emma are on the slopes skiing a difficult mountain in a coming blizzard. What happens then? People dying right and left, involvements of the Swiss government, the CIA, world organizations for peace, Israel, Hamas, diplomats, subterfuge and everybody seeming guilty and culpable … even best friends!

Yes, it’s all about nuclear capabilities and a bulletproof Mercedes is one of the stars of this tale.

I just want you other thriller addicts to be on the alert for this one and to let you know you have something to look forward to other than the Democratic Convention happening August 25 to 28.

P.S. In case you care, author Reich is a lifelong friend of our own Candice Bergen. But I had already written my rave for his book before I knew that.

——————————

Speaking of the Democratic Convention, Michael Lutin, the witty former astrologist for Vanity Fair, says this to me: “The national election of 2008 will take place with Pluto at the end of Sagittarius. A couple of weeks later Pluto will move back into Capricorn for the next 15 years. Don’t get stars in your eyes and start hyperventilating because your liberator (Obama) has come at last. And even if you’re an Obamannoyed Hillarino, don’t think that women have made history – yet. Pluto in Sag represents hope and dreams. It’s just that Pluto in Capricorn represents waking reality after the snooze button fails to work. Change is coming, yes, but not tomorrow or next week. Pluto in Capricorn represents the squeeze of power exercised by a tight-fisted and towering conservative aristocracy that may indeed eventually be toppled, but one that is not going down without a fight.”

Lutin characterizes Obama as a “little boy himself,” saying he can’t make a major move without some woman whispering directions. And Hillary, says he, astrologically speaking, “can never escape from dominant, controlling narcissistic men.”

So, re-fasten your seat belts. We’re still in for a bumpy night.

——————————

Maybe you’re a “Sex and the City” fan, maybe you’re not. But here’s a final word from Kim Cattrall who is the best thing in the movie as the sexy Samantha. Some people have compared her character to Aphrodite, the goddess of love. But writer Tom Leonard says, “Perhaps Chaucer’s worldly Wife of Bath is nearer to the mark.”

Kim: “People have given the movie too much weight and too much responsibility. It’s a heightened reality, a fairy tale, in some ways a guilty pleasure for a lot of people … we’re not trying to change the world, or define what love or sex is, or what women are!”

Click here on this text to read my nationally syndicated daily column.

19 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Frank Peterson
Oh my Liz, read Alan Furst; he is so much more interesting about the events leading up to WW2 and sexy to boot. As for War and Peace, read up on Napoleon on Wikipedia and bob’s yer uncle. Easy as pie. And Natasha is divine especially if you think of Audrey Hepburn, who was made for the part, and which I do every night in me dreams. Orlando Figes has a lovely thick book, perfect for summer, called Natasha’s Dance. All about Russian cultural history starting with a dance obviously that Natasha does in War and Peace; it’s a peasant’s dance that she seems to know intuitively Figes takes off from there and the man can write. Oh my yes.. Have a jolly read, Liz :-)
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 11:38 am
Get Sporty
Rules of Deception” sounds intriguing, makes it even more interesting to know the author is a longtime friend of Candace Bergen’s. Thank you for the recommendation and you always lively to read columns.
By Get Sporty on 06/18/2008 12:26 pm
mary lou s
liz, you are fun to read!
By mary lou s on 06/18/2008 1:58 pm
Peg O my heart
Oh, Liz, I love a good thriller. Nothing like it during summer vacation. Thanks for the wise counsel and testimonial.
By Peg O my heart on 06/18/2008 2:07 pm
Frank Peterson
Peg—trust me about Alan Furst’ s thrillers—he is superb. :-)
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 5:22 pm
Peg O my heart
Will do, Cap’n Frank! I had already made a note of it. BTW, my business partner ALWAYS says “Bob’s yer Uncle” - it made me LOL to see you say it today!
By Peg O my heart on 06/18/2008 9:13 pm
Peg O my heart
Frank - I meant to ask, any titles you can recommend by Alan Furst?
By Peg O my heart on 06/18/2008 9:58 pm
Frank Peterson
BTW Peggie I have yet to rad a bad one—and I’ve read all the espionage ones.
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 10:39 pm
kermie b
But what does it mean? Bob’s your uncle? Is it one of those British witty comments I never understand?
By kermie b on 06/19/2008 2:26 am
Peg O my heart
Ki B - Yes, it hails from Britain. Usually it’s used after giving instructions, or an explanation. It roughly translates to “And there you have it”. An example would be “Make a left on Main St., go down 3 blocks, turn right and Bob’s your Uncle”.
By Peg O my heart on 06/19/2008 9:06 am
charley
Of all the things in this world I appreciate most it’s someone who will recommend a good book, particularly if it’s in the genre of mystery/espionage…so thank you Liz…
By charley on 06/18/2008 4:40 pm
Peg O my heart
Liz - Since we are all addicts, is there a 12 Book Program that you know of?
By Peg O my heart on 06/18/2008 9:14 pm
Frank Peterson
No and I wouldn’t go to the damn thing if offered—or forced. I love me books too much for that to happen .
By Frank Peterson on 06/18/2008 9:31 pm
Rita T
Summer reading is so great! I think it is a flashback to grammar school days and trips to the old bookmobile. We could check books out for two weeks, but I was always finished with mine that first week. I cannot for the world understand anyone who doesn’t enjoy reading! And Liz, you are right on the money about Kim and the SATC movie. Samantha and Charlotte seemed the most true to their characters when it was on TV. While I thoroughly enjoyed the movie, it seemed they made the character of Miranda more shrill, if that was possible; and Carrie did not seem anything like she did on the small screen—even before Big sort of left her at the altar.
By Rita T on 06/18/2008 9:26 pm