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Right You Are, Mr. Moto (1957)

par John P. Marquand

Séries: Mr. Moto (6)

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976278,971 (3.38)1
In the final installment of John P. Marquand's classic espionage series, Mr. Moto returns--15 years after his previous adventure   After serving his country as a paratrooper in World War II, Jack Rhyce takes on an even more dangerous mission when he becomes a secret agent in the early years of the Cold War. Now he and fellow spy Ruth Bogart have been dispatched to Tokyo to foil an assassination attempt on a leading liberal politician. Murder is only the first part of this nefarious Communist plot; the ultimate objective is to stir up anti-American sentiment in a country that has formed close bonds with its former adversary in the West.   Undercover as do-gooders employed by the Asia Friendship League, Jack and Ruth are met at the airport by Mr. Moto, a would-be tour guide who offers to make their stay more hospitable. The American spies immediately suspect that there is more to Mr. Moto than meets the eye. But whose side is he on? To stop the cunning mastermind behind the sinister scheme, Jack and Ruth will have to learn the secrets of post-war Japan as quickly as possible. The mysterious Mr. Moto might just be their greatest ally, or their worst enemy.   First serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, John P. Marquand's popular and acclaimed Mr. Moto Novels were the inspiration for 8 films starring Peter Lorre.… (plus d'informations)
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An ordinary cold war story interesting only for being the last of the "Mr. Moto" books, a somewhat patronizing take on oriental detectives. i was not impressed at the time, my circle of acquaintance having some oriental friends. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Apr 23, 2021 |
The very last book in the Mr. Moto series. Written some fifteen years after the fifth book in the series and set in completely different world, Cold War Japan. The tone, too, is different. Marquand is a master of reflecting the attitudes and feelings of the eras in which he writes. For the 1950s, he has utterly captured the sense of paranoia and danger so often associated with the times--and the threat of Communist Russia and China. Even his prose is denser, reflecting the layer upon layer of insecurity his characters express and experience.

This is all so different from the Mr. Moto books of the 1930s. In those volumes the Far East was an extension of the American Frontier. It was a place where a man could redeem himself, start all over, and make his life count. And such was the case in all the prior heroes of the series, recognizing that Mr. Moto was not the hero but the man on the outside, manipulating the world in which the heroes needed to navigate. Not so in Stopover: Tokyo, where the hero, Jack Rhyce, is faced with existential dilemmas that turn him from his cut and dried life of expectations as an American spy. In this final work, all the prior devices and formulas at work for Mr. Moto are abandoned. It is truly a new era. And not a hopeful or positive one.

More so than the last "final" Mr. Moto written just before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, this book is a fitting closure to the series. It feels like that much more innocent and energetic world of the 1930s is gone for good. I shall miss Mr. Moto. ( )
  PaulCornelius | Apr 12, 2020 |
I'm glad to report that after a rather weak effort with Mr. Moto #5, Marquand ended the Mr. Moto series strongly. I really liked this book. It's probably the best of the whole series, or at least the one I liked the best. The set up is a bit different from previous versions, we're now after WWII, whereas all previous books took place before WWII (Mr. Moto was interred during the war). So Japan is no longer trying to extend it's influence in the world. It's more that they hope, Mr. Moto hopes at least, to keep the Russians from extending their influence into Japan. American influence is at least tolerable, and much preferable to Russian influence.

It's a nice change that in this book, the action takes part in Japan itself, so we get some nice background feeling for that country. All the other Mr. Moto books take place in foreign venues, China, Manchuria, Mongolia, Hawaii (ok, technically, Hawaii isn't foreign), the Caribbean, but not, primarily, Japan (a little glimpse in the first one). This one does, and I liked that. I've visited Japan several times because my younger son lived there for a few years, and am rather fond of that country and its culture.

Another deviation from the other plot lines is that the main protagonists are not a callow young man and a competent, independent young woman who just happen to find themselves in the wrong place at the wrong time. This time the young man, Jack Rhyse, and the young woman, Ruth Bogart are both highly competent, professional spies. They have been sent to Japan to foil a rumored Soviet plot to sew anti-Americanism in Japan by creating a situation whereby the Americans become the fall guys for the assassination of a prominent Japanese politician that they, i.e. the Reds, are planning. Jack and Ruth's cover is to be that they are investigating the Asia Friendship League and are also in the process of becoming starry-eyed lovers. In the book, they fall in love in fact as well as in the fantasy play acting in which one engages for cover as a professional spy. Quaint, perhaps, but also somewhat charming. Needless to say, Mr. Moto is flitting around the edges, helping things out in the background.

I found several things extremely interesting in this book, things that would have little meaning to anyone else, but since this is my review, I'll bore y'all with recounting those things anyway. Besides, other than poor Michael (sometimes, perhaps) no one else ever reads my crap. It's just a memory helper for me. So, I can write whatever I wish. Sorry 'bout that.

It turns out that Jack Rhyse is a graduate of Oberlin College and played tackle on their football team. One of his targets, i.e. an enemy agent, is also a former football player, but one who played for a "jerk-water Southern Baptist college", not "big time" like the Oberlin. Huh? Oberlin football was sort of big time 120 or so ago when they had John Heisman as their coach—yeah THE Heisman of trophy fame. If I recall correctly, Rhyse was class of '41. I'm pretty certain that Oberlin—the last college in the state of Ohio to have beaten Ohio State in football (true fact)—ceased to show even a vague semblance of being in "big time" athletics some 15 or 20 years before Jack Rhyse. So, I found that weird. But I liked the Oberlin reference, it is, after all, my own alma mater, and I was also, in fact, an Oberlin Athlete, albeit in wrestling. I sucked, of course, but that was the joy of college sports in olden days, it was to give the students an outlet for blowing off a bit of steam, not a marketing activity featuring hired, de facto professionals who had little to no aspiration toward academic pursuits.

A second interesting feature is that Ruth was alleged to have been a graduate of Goucher College. What's that you say? Yeah, who ever heard of Goucher? Well, I actually had a job at Goucher, the summer after I graduated from high school. My sister, believe it or not, is a Goucher graduate.

The third point of interest for me is that one of the characters had the same cover name as I do (in my fantasies that is). That is to say, once, probably in my teen years, I thought about the possible need one day to have a cover name or alias, so I picked one. Low and behold, a guy in this book has the same one. To protect my cover, I'll not divulge said name.

One last interesting-to-me feature is that both Jack Rhyse and the enemy-agent football player liked singing old songs from long-ago musicals. They're my kind of guys! Who doesn't like a rousing chorus of After the Ball is Over or some old Cole Porter and Irving Berlin creations? Actually, they didn't sing those. Rather it was one I didn't know, The Streets of New York from Victor Herbert's Red Mill.

So, anyway, what you have here is a good, well paced story that also has three or four weirdnesses that I found to be supremely endearing. ( )
  lgpiper | Jun 21, 2019 |
A pleasurable read, a competent plot and professionally told. There is insight into the mentality of the spy, and it's plausible that Marquand knew someone involved in the "business", given the detail. This novel reminds us of the involvement of the USA with Japan. The USA was particularly careful that the constitution it imposed on Japan was not to be threatened by communist agitation and revolution.
The development of a love affair between the two professional agents indicates a distaste on the author's part for the distorted values that give rise to spying and subterfuge.
  ivanfranko | Jun 27, 2016 |
A continuation of the Mr. Moto novels, but this one is very different. First, it takes place after the war, in a ravaged and potentially unstable Tokyo. Second, the Americans still come in a matched pair (young man and young woman) but this time they are professional spies, and rather less dense that their counterparts in the previous books. The detail on spy-work in the immediate post war period is most interesting; one imagines that Marquand knew a lot the people involved. This one is also more compelling as a novel than the pre-war books, as the relationship between the two spies deepens. ( )
  annbury | Sep 15, 2010 |
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In the final installment of John P. Marquand's classic espionage series, Mr. Moto returns--15 years after his previous adventure   After serving his country as a paratrooper in World War II, Jack Rhyce takes on an even more dangerous mission when he becomes a secret agent in the early years of the Cold War. Now he and fellow spy Ruth Bogart have been dispatched to Tokyo to foil an assassination attempt on a leading liberal politician. Murder is only the first part of this nefarious Communist plot; the ultimate objective is to stir up anti-American sentiment in a country that has formed close bonds with its former adversary in the West.   Undercover as do-gooders employed by the Asia Friendship League, Jack and Ruth are met at the airport by Mr. Moto, a would-be tour guide who offers to make their stay more hospitable. The American spies immediately suspect that there is more to Mr. Moto than meets the eye. But whose side is he on? To stop the cunning mastermind behind the sinister scheme, Jack and Ruth will have to learn the secrets of post-war Japan as quickly as possible. The mysterious Mr. Moto might just be their greatest ally, or their worst enemy.   First serialized in the Saturday Evening Post, John P. Marquand's popular and acclaimed Mr. Moto Novels were the inspiration for 8 films starring Peter Lorre.

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