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Red, White, Blue by Lea Carpenter

Red, White, Blue

by Lea Carpenter

  • Critics' Consensus (18):
  • Readers' Rating (23):
  • Published:
  • Aug 2018, 320 pages
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There are currently 23 reader reviews for Red, White, Blue
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Judith S. (Binghamton, NY)

Intellectually entertaining
Red, White, Blue is a thinking person's book. Similar to international films, the reader is not spoon fed or taken for a quick read ride through the story. Carpenter gives us a sneak peak into the work of intelligence and espionage in a style that is thought provoking, thrilling and philosophical. I found the need to focus through the unusual sequence of chapters invigorating although some may find it cumbersome or confusing, hence the need to take it slow and think it through while reading. Overall the book is fascinating, funny, educational and relevant.
Marcia C. (Jeffersonville, PA)

Worlds of Deception
Red, White, Blue is a book centered in deception—the deceptions of the CIA, the deceptions of its agents; the half-truths that are shared in Anna's family and the half-truths used by the author to describe the evolution of the truth that underlies the story. In the middle of it all stands Anna, a young woman, recently married, who is determined to answer the questions surrounding her father's death in an avalanche in Switzerland.
While she is on her honeymoon, Anna has a seemingly chance encounter with a gentleman in a bar in the south of France. Over time, this gentleman, a CIA caseworker, reveals his closemore
Arden A. (Longboat Key, FL)

Not your typical spy novel
This is an excellent spy novel, interestingly presented with so much information embedded in each sentence that you tend to reread paragraphs so as not to miss anything. It toggles back and forth between the voice of a spy and the voice of the daughter of a spy, about her father, who was a spy, and his untimely death.

"Clandestine is something completely hidden fom view, as opposed to covert, which means something that appears as something else."

"At the end of the day what differentiates you in this line of work isn't teachable. Teachables are icing."

"Espionage isn't a math problem, Anna, it's a painting."

Thosemore
Molly B. (Longmont, CO)

Spare is great
The alternating story lines and the spare prose in Red, White, and Blue kept my interest, to the point of fascination. Carpenter provided some insight into the workings of undercover and CIA operations, which I assume are largely true – they certainly seemed plausible. What I liked best were the little pearls of wisdom presented quite naturally throughout the book, like "You don't have a sense of danger until you've experienced loss". And any reader who is a parent will react to the conversation between the protagonist's parents right after she was born: the mother says, "Maybe she'll fight for justice" and themore
M K. (Minneapolis, MN)

What Do You Know?
Picture yourself, it's mid week, and now, after dinner you decide it's time to start the book all your friends have been raving about. Unless you're willing to not get any sleep this mid week night it might be better to wait for a rainy afternoon in which at the worst you'll have to call your boss and tell her that you'll be a little late the next morning. Red, White, Blue is that kind of book.

Reading the first few pages you notice a certain crispness about the writing, very straightforward and yet sucking you into its intriguing vortex of two simultaneous stories: one of a person applying to work inmore
Maureen R. (Alamo, CA)

Red, White, Blue, What America Asks
Red, White, Blue by Lea Carpenter is a whole new genre of spy novel. Brilliantly crafted, it is smart and the reader is smarter for having read it. Narrated in two voices, it is more than an inside look at the CIA, it is a look at what working for the CIA demands in personal sacrifice. Not just for the agents, but for all those who love them. This is a politically savvy and pertinent novel in these times of geopolitical and national turmoil. I will never watch the news in the same way. This book answers questions I didn't know to ask.
Becky M. (Crumpler, NC)

Something Can Look Chaotic
"Something can look quite still and be in a state of total chaos . . . something can look chaotic when in fact it is absolutely controlled"--a quote from Red, White, Blue which not only describes life in the Intelligence world but this novel as well. Told in a back and forth play between Q and A (You never hear the questions!) and the chronology of Anna's life, the reader experiences the awakening of a young woman who learns of her father's life in espionage along with details of the CIA and how it operates. As Anna confronts the untimely death of her father, she also struggles with her husband's success andmore
Karna B. (Long Beach, CA)

Red, White, Blue
A compelling read! Well-written, suspenseful, and hard to put down, we explore the world of espionage and a daughter's search for understanding of who her father really was. Anna, the daughter of a CIA case officer, is trying to come to terms with his questionable death caused by an avalanche. In a "chance" meeting with a man who indicates he has known her father and a package later received containing cryptic information about her father, Anna begins to wonder who her father really was. The juxtaposition between Anna's third person narrative and the first person narrative of the CIA agent, propels this story ofmore
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