Death Will Have Your Eyes

A Novel about Spies

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Pub Date 29 Jul 2014 | Archive Date 30 Sep 2014

Description

Mulholland Books takes pleasure in restoring to print an acclaimed novel of espionage and suspense by the author of Drive.

David (as he's currently known) was a member of an elite corps of spies trained during the coldest days of the Cold War. For almost a decade he has been out of the game, working as a sculptor. Then a phone call in the middle of the night awakens him: the only other survivor from that elite corps has gone rogue. David is tasked with stopping him.

What ensues is an existential cat-and-mouse game played out across the American landscape, through the diners and motels that dot the terrain like green plastic houses on a Monopoly board. Both a suspenseful novel of pursuit and a thematically rich exploration of the mind of a spy, Death Will Have Your Eyes is a contemporary classic of the espionage genre.
Mulholland Books takes pleasure in restoring to print an acclaimed novel of espionage and suspense by the author of Drive.

David (as he's currently known) was a member of an elite corps of spies...

A Note From the Publisher

Death Will Have Your Eyes is the latest release in Mulholland Books's Classics series, in which we revive out-of-print classics within the mystery genre.

Death Will Have Your Eyes is the latest release in Mulholland Books's Classics series, in which we revive out-of-print classics within the mystery genre.


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780316403245
PRICE $19.99 (USD)

Average rating from 8 members


Featured Reviews

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Fascinating! This is only the second of Sallis' books I have read -- the first being People Like Us. I will definitely add this to my list of books to recommend to my customers who look for a book as fast moving as a thriller but as well written as a literary novel.

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Some of the best-written crime fiction is contained in James Sallis’s Lew Griffin series. Sadly, that series is out of print, but we have the consolation that he continues to write new works. It is also gratifying that "Death Will Have Your Eyes," one of his older works is being re-issued by Mulholland Books.

"Death Will Have Your Eyes" is purportedly about a retired spy re-entering his long-deserted field. “Dave” has been re-activated as an assassin, on the trail of a fellow assassin, someone he obviously has known quite well. Sallis doesn’t give a lot of detail; his readers must be grown-ups and search between the lines.

What I think Sallis really has created is a story of Dave’s odyssey to reclaim his humanity, to reclaim his right to sit and enjoy a glass of wine with his beloved, Gabrielle, to not have to bear the burden of what he did as an assassin for many years. On the other hand, it is an act of kindness he did as an agent that has, in his words, “spiraled” to bring him to the point of life or death.

While Dave tracks an assassin, others track him. And try to kill him. Only they don’t. Most step aside, as if acknowledging the greater task that lies ahead of Dave. They are layers Dave must shed before confronting the final choice.

Whether Dave is successful or not in becoming human again, he has learned that old agents never die, they live on in myth. And their song is sung by Sallis.

On the moment Dave gave it up: “But then one day in Salvador as I stood watching a red Fiat burn, I realized that it was over for me — as though I’d stepped through an unseen door, looked up and found the world transformed in ways I could not fathom, or had blundered over borders into a foreign country where familiar words meant inexplicable things.”

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