Friday, October 4, 2013

The Portuguese Escape by Ann Bridge

Media of The Portuguese Escape

Having just finished Ann Bridge's The Portuguese Escape (1958), I am ready to plan a visit to this country that she describes most lovingly. 

Ms. Bridge's books featuring Julia Probyn are a wonder. They are part suspense, part travelogue, part a picture of current events at the time, and in this one, part primer in the Portuguese language. 

Here we have diplomats, royalty, country ways, fashion, Big Bad Communists, romance, a wedding, churches and windmills, fast cars, picnics, ocean swims, intrigue, priests, narrow escapes, and kidnapping.

The plot revolves around young Countess Hetta who has just escaped from Communist-run Hungary and has arrived in Lisbon to be reunited with her mother. Hetta is drawn into a scheme by British Intelligence to help identify a Hungarian priest who has also escaped the country and is headed to America. 

There are all sorts of spy-type goings on with telephone conversations in code and car chases on winding roads which kept me reading, but mostly I was enjoying learning a bit about the country and its ways. 

As for Julia, she appears always at the right time. She is in Lisbon as a freelance journalist to cover a royal wedding.  She is confident, smart, fashionable, down-to-earth, and people like her. She knows everyone, thinks quickly on her feet, and doesn't put up with any nonsense. The perfect heroine!

She is in a somewhat on/off relationship with the British Intelligence agent who is in charge of getting this Hungarian priest moved on to America, so there is that bit of romance going on as well. 

This is the second in a series of eight books that Ms. Bridge wrote featuring the intrepid journalist and they all take place in different countries. I enjoy the pacing of the novels. The writing moves smoothly between action and information about the locale. It is certainly fun to be a part of Julia Probyn's world. 

2 comments:

  1. I've read the first two Julia Probyn books and I love them! They are perfect escapist reading for me, with just the right mix of all those things you mentioned. I'm so glad you like Julia, too. :)

    If you are interested in Portugal, and you enjoy a British sense of humor, there is a TV show from England called One Foot in the Grave. They did a Christmas special called One Foot in the Algarve, where the main characters traveled to Portugal. It's one of the funniest things I've ever seen, and has some really gorgeous scenery. I'm not sure what year it was made, but I'm sure you could look it up online and track it down.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kathy, I sometimes think Ms. Bridge goes on a little too long in getting to the denouement, but then I remind myself to just relax and enjoy! I love the elegant lifestyle that everyone lives in these books!

      I am up for anything British! My library carries Season Two of this show on DVD. I wonder what happened to the others? Oh, well, perhaps I can find the Portugal program somewhere else. Thanks for the tip!

      Delete