MADMEN OF BENGHAZI By Gerald de Villers

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Gerald de Villers wrote over 200 spy novels featuring Malko, a contract agent for the CIA. In Madmen of Benghazi, Malko’s mission is to keep a Libyan aspirant to the throne safe from the marauding militias and terrorists. Malko finds time to entertain a London supermodel and confuse Egyptian security forces. The descriptions of the chaos in Libya are harrowing. If you’re looking for a fast-paced, quirky spy novel, give Madmen of Benghazi a try. GRADE: B

12 thoughts on “MADMEN OF BENGHAZI By Gerald de Villers

    1. george Post author

      Prashant, I saw plenty of Gerald de Villers books when I was visiting France. He’s very popular there. In the late 1970s and early 1980s about 40 MALKO spy novels were published in the U.S. by a paperback publisher, Pinnacle. Now, the books are being translated and published here again.

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    1. george Post author

      Sergio, I’ve read a couple dozen Gerald de Villers spy novels (in translation, of course). I think you could jump in anywhere. There are few references to former books. Each book stands on its own mission mostly.

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  1. Jeff Meyerson

    In the mid-1970s, Pinnacle Books published a dozen of the SAS Malko Linge thrillers in English. They include The Belfast Connection (ISBN: 0-523-00844-9) in 1976.

    In 2014, Vintage Books is publishing two SAS books with plots that feel ripped from the headlines: The Madmen of Benghazi (ISBN: 978-0-8041-6931-8) in July and Chaos in Kabul (ISBN 978-0-8041-6933-2) in October. The books were translated and adapted by veteran French translator William Rodarmor. Future Malko Linge adventures will include de Villiers’ last SAS book, a Russia-themed thriller called La Vengeance du Kremlin (The Revenge of the Kremlin).

    De Villiers died last year.

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  2. Richard R.

    I’ll admit spy novels aren’t among my favorite genres, or perhaps sub-genres, of fiction. In my dotage, I seem to be happy with books more on a low-stress level. Still, Barbara may like one of these. She says she’s never read a spy novel.

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    1. george Post author

      Rick, de Villers’ used his “inside information” to make his spy novels realistic. He predicted the assassination of Sadat a year before it happened! Apparently, de Villers had sources high in intelligence circles.

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