cover image Too Bad to Die

Too Bad to Die

Francine Mathews, read by Matthew Brenner. Penguin Audio, , unabridged, 9 CDs, 11.5 hrs., $40 ISBN 978-1-61176-367-6

Combining historical fact with thriller fiction, Mathews’s nonstop novel takes us to wartime Iran in 1943, when Allied world leaders Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin are about to meet in the Soviet Union’s Tehran embassy to discuss opening a second front against Hitler’s Germany. A Nazi assassin known as The Fencer has access to the three world leaders, and the only man aware of this peril is dashing Royal Navy Intelligence Officer Ian Fleming. The problem is that Fleming deduced the situation using info gleaned by his pal Alan Turing’s code-breaking machine, considered an unreliable source. Using the pseudonym James Bond, he struggles through an adventure filled with action, a little romance, and a lot of ghastly torture. Meanwhile, Mathews shifts her focus to the novel’s other key players—Roosevelt struggling with his legs, Stalin indulging in paranoid rants, and Churchill suffering a debilitating bout with bronchitis. Meanwhile, the prime minister’s promiscuous daughter-in-law, Pamela, occupies almost as many pages as Fleming/Bond, indulging in affairs with an assortment of beaux. Shakespearean actor Brenner reads the novel’s factual and fictional elements with a staunch-upper-lip British accent, being careful to treat Roosevelt and Churchill with a news anchorman’s respect, while getting considerably more dramatic for the chapters featuring Fleming and Pamela. He doesn’t try to imitate the distinctive sound of these two world leaders’ voices, other than to shift from American to English accents when appropriate. His Fleming hasn’t even a playful hint of any of the actors who have played Bond. And his Turing speaks with a tortured stutter that will remind no one of Benedict Cumberbatch. [em]A Riverhead hardcover. (Mar.) [/em]