Venetian Blind (novel)

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William Haggard on the back cover of The Conspirators, 1967
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Venetian Blind is a 1959 suspense novel by the British author William Haggard published in England by Cassell and in the United States by Ives Washburn. It was Haggard's second of 21 books involving his protagonist Colonel Charles Russell, the head of the unobtrusive but lethal Security Executive, a government counter-intelligence agency. Like many of Haggard's books it has both standard elements of suspense and an almost Henry Jamiesian exposition of British Establishment mores and character, in both the government and upper-class financiers, scientists, industrialists, and their families.

Plot

Protagonist is perhaps too strong a word to describe Colonel Russell. As Haggard himself wrote about his fiction:

My novels are chiefly novels of suspense with a background of international politics. A Colonel Charles Russell of the Security Executive, a not entirely imaginary British counter-espionage organization, while not a protagonist in the technical sense, holds the story line together in the background by his operations, while the characters in the foreground carry the action."[1]

Like Haggard's first book, Slow Burner, which involved the exploitation of a fictional nuclear power source, the events in Venetian Blind turn on the development of another notion from science fiction, "negative gravity". Gervas Leat, a rich and imperious Englishman with a second home in Venice and a beautiful Venetian step-daughter who is hostess to his English manor, is working on negative gravity in two of his highly profitable factories. Because of his ties with Professor Wasserman, a world-class physicist turned industrialist, Colonel Russell learns that leaks regarding the highly secret work on negative gravity have been making their way to a rival firm in Germany for several years now. Russell works mostly in the book's background to identify the traitor, helped by Richard Wakeley, a relatively young but very accomplished lawyer who is being considered by the government as a possible replacement for the soon-to-retire Russell. Much of the book is an examination of the complicated, even tortured relationships between Wakeley, Gervas Leat, Leat's step-daughter, the occasionally buffoonish Professor Wasserman, and a disaffected assistant to Leat whose wife has been one of Leat's many conquests. Upper-class dinners, clubs, and government offices figure conspicuously as the plot advances from the English countryside to the heart of Venice. Only Colonel Russell is exactly what he seems to be on the surface and, as in Slow Burner, the final, violent dénouement that wraps up the book finds him more of a bemused spectator than an active participant.

Reception and/or Appraisal

Reviews were mixed:

The New York Times: sssssss [2]

Kirkus Reviews: uuuuuuu [3]

References

  1. From the back flap of the dust jacket of the Walker and Company American edition of The Conspirators, New York, 1967
  2. The New York Times, June 21, 1970: [1]
  3. Kirkus Reviews, May 1, 1970: [2]