Thursday, August 14, 2008

The Bourne Identity - Robert Ludlum

Spy Novels have never really appealed to me. It’s not that I am too much of a realist to find stories about international intelligence agencies, and government spies and terrorists over the top. Not at all! I love all these things in your regular spy movies. In fact, I say, they should throw in more terrorists and spies in there. But whatever books I had read on the topic, never really brought out the intensity of a situation as well as it came out for me in a movie. Now since my experience with spy fiction is pretty limited, it could be a case of me reading all the wrong books. But when the first two or three books in a genre don’t work for you, you do tend to lock the entire lineage out. That’s what happened with me.

But Bourne identity, it is one of the favourite books of a voracious reader friend I have got. And since I loved the movie trilogy so much, I decided to give Bourne Identity a read.

And I was blown away!

As it turned out, the only thing common between the movie and the book is Jason Bourne and the fact that he is an amnesic. Everything else is unrelated! I fail to understand why the movie makers would change the story of Bourne Identity! It is fast paced, extremely clever, intense, suspenseful and with the right amount of action for a novel. To be fair, with a different story, the movies were pretty good as well, with the right amount of (and more than the books) action for a movie.

The Bourne Identity is about a man who is found on a French island, loaded with bullets, not in a holster but in his body, minus his memory. But as he is treated by a drunk doctor, a clue is discovered which sends the patient, or Pierre off to a Swiss Bank, under the name of the doctor who treated him, Washburn. On the way, he figures out that he is extremely resourceful and has a knack of getting out of tight situations. He realizes he has more than a working knowledge of some form of martial arts, is adept with weapons, and is masterful with disguises. At the bank, he discovers his name is Jason Bourne. And he also discovers that a whole bunch of unknown enemies are out to kill him. But thanks to the skills he possesses, he manages to kill some and evade some of his other killers.

Now all he wants is to figure out is who he really is.

And in the search for his past he realizes, much to his horror, that Carlos, the international assassin (he is actually in the book) and an American Government organization, Treadstone, are out to kill him. When he digs out the reason, it is all the more horrifying. But in a perfect case of “ Syndrome” an economist from Canada, who he had taken as a hostage, falls in love with him and has unwavering faith that all would be well as long as she was with Jason Bourne.

And propelled by this love, though fearful of losing it because of the truth, Jason Bourne keeps unearthing the past.

The twists in the book are quite gripping. You don’t even know whether you should hate Jason Bourne because he probably is a baddie, or sympathize with him because he is an amnesic. The balance keeps tilting towards the later option because of all the panic attacks that he has whenever he has blinding visions of the past. And of course there is a poor girl in question for who you want the best. And of course Jason Bourne is the hero! And the hero has to, has to be victorious! It’s the how that will keep you hooked on to the book!
Read on...!

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