Above Suspicion (novel)
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| Author | Helen MacInnes |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Genre | Spy thriller |
| Publisher | Harrap (UK) Little, Brown (US) |
Publication date | 1941 |
| Media type | |
Above Suspicion is a 1941 spy thriller novel by the British writer Helen MacInnes.[1] Her debut novel, it was inspired by the real life experiences of MacInnes honeymooning across Europe with her husband Gilbert Highet in the 1930s. She combines a plot with amateur spies with a Buchanesque adventure in the Third Reich which illustrates the brutality and totalitarianism of the Nazi Party.[2]
In the summer of 1939 the Oxford University academic Richard Myles and his wife Frances and are appeoached by an old friend and member of the British secret service to head to Continental Europe and make contact with an agent who has not been heard of for a while. While tensions are high following the March 1939 Annexation of Czechoslovakia in violation of the Munich Agreement, the couple's habit of annual holidays in the cities and mountains of Central Europe mean they will be "above suspicion".
To approach the missing agent they have to follow a chain of undercover agents working for him for security reasons. Beginning in Paris they then work their way across Germany, visiting cities such as Heidelberg, Nuremberg and Munich where they receive subtle clues about their next destination. All the time they are watched as a matter of course by the Gestapo as suspicious foreigners.
Having picked up the help of Thornley, a young Oxford student, and American journalist named Van Courtland it is in Innsbruck in the former Austria they reach what should be their destination. But at the house of the chess piece collector Doctor Mespelbrunn they find Sig von Aschenhausen, once a friendly acquaintance from their student days at Oxford now turned ruthless Nazi official. Their mission turning suddenly brutal, they make a bid to rescue the real Mespelbrunn and then escape across the Brenner Pass to Italy.