Note: Spoilers follow for The Cellist,
as well as some minor spoilage of The New Girl and The Order
. Should this review have readers, they are cautioned about such.Daniel
Silva's master Israeli spy and assassin Gabriel Allon had an initial
career as an artist and premier art restorer before being recruited into
his nation's project of vengeance against the terrorists who kidnapped
and killed Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympic Games. As a
restorer, his job is to clean and repair great works of art in such a
way that they look as they did when first displayed, with no one the
wiser that another's hand has touched them. As Silva has written him,
Gabriel brought the same mentality to his espionage missions -- when
things went catastrophically wrong for Israel's enemies the disasters
appeared to have no origin or perpetrator. Perhaps the targets of his
efforts -- those who survived, anyway -- knew their malefactor's name
and steady green-eyed gaze. But no one else did, at least not in any way
that could ever be proven.
Silva's style helped enhance this
quality. Though Gabriel's missions may have featured violence, vehicle
chases and episodes of high tension, he writes with a spare elegance
that suggests a refined after-action report. Readers might have the
impression they are reading the precise and carefully written mission
debrief that ordinarily would have been seen by almost no one before
being quietly tucked away in the vaults that hold the secrets of
nations.
His two most recent outings were clearly subpar -- the ugly onstage fridging of a 12-year-old girl in
The New Girl and the Dan Brown-wannabe plot of
The Order
might be acceptable output from lesser writers, but Silva readers had
become accustomed to better work. Up through about chapter 60, he gives
them reason to hope that
The Cellist may be a return to form.
When
Allon friend and Russian expatriate Viktor Orlov is found murdered by
nerve toxin, suspicion eventually alights on the journalist who was
passing him incriminating evidence that a large German bank was not only
crooked through and through, it was a main player in Russian government
officials' efforts to launder the profits of corruption and safely
store them in the West. Eventually Gabriel, working with counterparts in
other intelligence agencies, discovers not only the real actors behind
the Orlov assassination but also the source of the insider documents.
That source, Isabel Brenner, is turned by Gabriel and his team into the
point person of a scheme to disrupt the flow of money into the west and
block Russian efforts to destabilize Western economies. The title
The Cellist
is taken from Isabel's superb talent on that instrument, which she uses
to open the door to the inner circle of the Russian schemers and
oligarchs. Though Isabel will have the chance to aim at the very highest
levels of the Russian government -- and Silva all but names Vladimir
Putin -- the danger to her will be exponentially greater. Gabriel and
his team will have to wield all of their skills to complete their
mission and protect Isabel, and the dual tasks may yet be too much for
them.
Over the course of the Gabriel Allon series, Silva has developed his most regular collaborators as a kind of
Mission:Impossible
squad whose operations write large the former Mossad motto, "By way of
deception shall you make war" (a loose translation of Proverbs 24:6). In
the onion-like layers of the Allon team's schemes, their foes' own
faults burrow them in too deeply to escape -- and when they turn to
confront the enemy that brought them there they find only air.
The Cellist
sets up such a scenario, although repeating some very similar earlier
missions involving Sarah Bancroft and Natalie Mizrahi. Still, Silva
helps keep the interest in what would otherwise be a familiar plot by
exploring Isabel's character and developing her so that readers care
about what happens to her. And then it all falls apart.
The first 3/5 of
The Cellist
cover Isabel's actions as Gabriel's inside agent in the Russian
financial scheme. Silva drops in snide drive-by shots at "the American
president" who is unnamed but clearly Donald Trump. Spy thriller authors
usually create fictional leaders for nations, either to give them the
characteristics needed for the plot or to avoid outdating their novel,
or to prevent the sometimes jarring comparison between their depictions
of events and the way those events are known to have unfolded. Silva's
use of Putin as the actual Russian president doesn't really weaken his
plot, since the main target and antagonist is a fictional associate. And
his turned-up nose at the former president appears intermittently and
might slow the narrative, speed-bump style, but only briefly before
accelerating back to cruising speed.
But once Isabel's mission is
resolved, Silva turns to the real-world events of Trump's loss in
November, his unseemly and increasingly unrealistic attempts to prove he
really won the election, his ghastly and unpresidential behavior on
January 6 and the fever-swamp conspiracy of groups like QAnon. He mixes
them to create a second storyline about Gabriel's discovery of a plot to
assassinate the incoming president -- an unnamed longtime politician
who just happens to be a senator from Delaware "called upon to heal a
sick and divided nation" in the "twilight of his life" -- spawned by
Russian agents and secret schemes. This choice wrecks
The Cellist
and moves it from the middle of the Allon books in quality to the
bottom tier. It's akin to taking an unspectacular but well-done piece of
art and setting it before a class of pre-schoolers while still wet and
encouraging them to do whatever they wanted with it.
In his
acknowledgments, Silva says he "resolved to include the near death of
American democracy in my story of Russia's relentless war on the West"
after the January 6 Capitol riots. He replaced his existing ending with
an extensive rewrite finished over six weeks, and it shows. It's not
impossible to create a story with identifiable but disguised stand-ins
for actual politicians and leaders that interprets known events and
facts but still entertains while it enlightens. Whether that can be done
by Daniel Silva in six weeks or less remains unknown, because it didn't
happen in
The Cellist. Our narrative of Russian oligarchs and
political leaders spinning webs of financial corruption and
self-enrichment in exclusive hotels and resorts is suddenly invaded by
Silva's assertions of QAnon's machinations and snickering put-downs like
"a universally loathed and poorly groomed senator from Texas who had
attempted to overturn the results of the election." I have no idea how
many people dislike Ted Cruz although I suspect it's a sizable figure
and I agree his beard has been a bad look -- but so what? He has no
relationship to the story I started to read when Sarah Bancroft happened
on Viktor Orlov's body, and neither does any of the other clumsy mix of
reportage and speculation that Silva trowels on his modestly successful
story of Isabel Brenner's clandestine ensnarement of the Russian
kleptocracy.
When we get to the place where Silva broadly insinuates that the unnamed-but-obviously-Donald-Trump-President of the US
personally called
the unnamed-but-obviously-Vladimir-Putin President of Russia to inform
him that Gabriel Allon had placed an agent in his circle, we move from
Trump's clueless carelessness about intelligence matters making him a
useful meathead for America's opponents to him being an active asset for
the same. This sheer wish-fulfillment by Silva lets readers know that
they have essentially wasted their time following Isabel and her
infiltration because it's all a set-up to inform them Donald Trump is
bad. Many people knew that already. Even many of the people who voted for him twice -- your
reviewer is not among them -- knew that already. We didn't need Daniel
Silva to trash a perfectly enjoyable spy novel to tell us.