Second wind

by Dick Francis

Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Library's review

England, Caribien, ca 1999
En tv-meteorolog, Perry Stuart og hans ven Kris Ironside, begge i starten af 30'erne tager en tur gennem en orkan, Odin, med et tomotorers fly, de har fået stillet til rådighed af Robin Darcy. Undervejs skal de bare lige lande på øen Trox og gøre Robin en tjeneste. De
Show More
får lige flyet op igen, inden stormen er over dem. De når ind til orkanens øje, men på vej ud igen, går det galt. Flyet nødlander på havett og Kris blæser væk i gummibåden, mens Perry er svineheldig og skyller i land på Trox efter mange timer i havet.
Perry får tiden på øen til at gå med at kigge nærmere på resterne af de bygninger, som Odin har ødelagt og han finder et pengeskab, hvor han kan gætte koden og kigge på indholdet. Det er nogle papirer og en geigertæller. Han fotograferer nogle af dem og skjuler sit kamera. Et par dage senere bliver han undsat på en underlig måde, for et fly lander og den bevæbnede besætning er iført strålebeskyttelsesdragter. Uden at give sig til kende binder de ham og giver ham bind for øjnene og sætter ham i land på en af Cayman øerne i nærheden. Han lader som om han ikke har genkendt redningsfolkene, men faktisk er han sikker på at det er hans værtsfolk Michael Ford og Robin og Evelyn Darcy. Han er sikker på at de har noget meget fordækt for, men samtidig er han også taknemmelig for at de ikke bare slog ham ihjel, da de fandt ham.
Vel hjemme i England hos sin måske synske mormor og hendes sygeplejerske, fortæller han sin historie til mormoren og de bliver enige om at han skal opsøge myndighederne. Det gør han og de er ret interesseret i hans historie og hans gæt på at papirerne var en slags indkøbsseddel til dele til atomvåben. Han sætter dog ikke navn på Michael, Robin og Evelyn.
I starten af romanen er der et selskab ved en hesteejer, der lige skal vise sin hest frem, men til sin rædsel opdager at den er blevet forgiftet og er lige ved at dø. Sammenhængen med resten af historien kommer først senere, da det viser sig at det er strålesyge, den har været ramt af.
Stuart snævrer ind til at det er et firma, Unified Trading Company, der står bag. Det ejes af Michael og Amy Ford, Robin Darcy, Caspar Harvey, George Loricroft og Oliver Quigley. Det er ikke en bestemt af dem, der leder firmaet, så af og til går noget i fisk, fordi de ikke aftaler alting på forhånd. Kris og Stuart bliver igen forsøgt dræbt, denne gang ved sabotage af Kris' fly, så Stuart deler alle sine mistanker med myndighederne (dvs en John Rupert).
Stuart finder ud af at han har fået mykobakterie paratuberkulose ved at drikke mælk fra noget kvæg på Trox. Georges kone, Glenda, finder ud af at han har løjet for hende om forretningsrejser og at han har solgt atommateriale. Hun havde fundet noget gråt pulver i et af hans gemmer og var uforvarende kommet til at tabe noget af det i hestens foder, så den var blevet syg. Det kan hun ikke leve med, så hun slår ham ihjel og hopper selv ud foran et tog.
Caspars datter Belladonna aner ikke noget om faderens bijob som landsforræder, så hende kan Stuart godt få oplysninger ud af.
Efter lidt flere forviklinger finder Stuart ud af at Robin spiller et farligt dobbeltspil, dvs han er faktisk god nok, således som Stuarts intuition hele tiden har sagt ham. De onde bliver straffet eller brugt til gode formål. Michael bliver lidt for kæphøj og kommer til at skyde en indbrudstyv med en revolver, der tidligere er begået drab med, så hans tid på fri fod er pludselig brugt op.
Der er et helt mærkeligt subplot med Amy og de køer, der går på øen Trox og noget med pasteurisering, men det giver overhovedet ikke mening, så det bør man vist bare glemme. Stuart og sygeplejersken Jett van Els bliver gift, mens Robin og Evelyn bliver skilt.

Plottet giver ikke ret megen mening og jeg er træt af Dick Francis vane med at sætte hovedpersonerne i telepatisk forbindelse med omverdenen, typisk nære slægtninge. Til gengæld er det sjovt at læse noget om meteorologi fra tiden inden computermodellerne definitivt slog gætværk og mavefornemmelser af banen.

Ikke helt så tosset som Christies konspirationsteorier, men samme banehalvdel.
Show Less

Publication

London : Pan, 2000.

Description

Flying in the eye of a hurricane, a plane carrying TV reporter Perry Stuart crashes in the Caribbean. In this manner Stuart discovers an island of uranium smugglers, a find which puts his life in danger.

User reviews

LibraryThing member caro488
two weathermen, one light plane, a few horse stables, a weekend in the country, a sick filly, an invitation to Florida, and a flight through a hurricane...
LibraryThing member tripleblessings
TV weather forecaster Perry Stuart is stranded on a small island in a hurricane, and discovers the dangerous secrets of Trox Island. Rather improbable plot, not one of Francis' best.
LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
A lot richer than I'd remembered. The side stories are almost worth a book by themselves.
LibraryThing member krsball
Not a huge Dick Francis fan, but good story.
LibraryThing member janoorani24
I read this book when it first came out, and really enjoyed it then. Listening to it as an audio book was just as enjoyable. Michael Page doesn't have quite the voice range of Tony Britton (the narrator of other Dick Francis audio books I've listened to), but he was easy to listen to and added to
Show More
the story. This novel features horses in only a very minor way, but has a great main character, a BBC weather forecaster who gets into loads of trouble after the plane he is in crashes after flying through the eye of a hurricane. Francis worked with a real BBC weather man in doing research for the book, and the facts one can glean about weather forecasting, hurricanes and surviving a crash on a desert island are an added bonus to the mystery. In fact, the mystery in this Francis novel is a little hard to fathom, and is one of the weaker plots for a Dick Francis book. It had something to do with selling nuclear bomb-making material, and really didn't make much sense. I'm still giving this one four stars, because I liked all the side stories, and the flying through a hurricane part, and all the minor characters.
Show Less
LibraryThing member DocWalt10
Dick Francis is one of my favorite authors. I always enjoy his books. Good character development.
LibraryThing member SalemAthenaeum
When a hurricane-chasing plane is downed on a Caribbean island, TV meteorologist Perry Stuart barely escapes with his life. But he can't escape what he saw on the island--and if the people who've tracked him back to England have their way, Stuart will have a zero percent chance of survival.
LibraryThing member mirrani
A very minor mention of horse racing, but it's there. This book is mostly about the intrigue of a private island and what mystery surrounds the people who own (or don't own) the place. Second Wind was my first Dick Francis book and I have many more to go before I can judge this against any of his
Show More
other books, but the story was interesting. There were some times when I found myself frustrated at the writing style or annoyed with the main character's seeming stupidity (he had to have people repeat things to him a lot) but overall I enjoyed figuring out who had what part to play in the events that unfolded.
Show Less
LibraryThing member ScottKalas
I could never really get pulled into the story, the suspense was almost nil for me. Every writer has thier own style and perhaps another read or two of Francis' books will win me over but the first one fell short.
LibraryThing member thesmellofbooks
Not as absorbing as his other books. And only one left before he starts writing them with his son. Ah, well. All good things come to an end. Hoping the Felix ones are as good as the Richard and Marys.
LibraryThing member Hardboiled
Have not read Francis in long time but this is certainly not one of his best. Plot is weak and characterizations very shallow which makes for a fairly boring read.
LibraryThing member quondame
Weatherman, the kind that researched and reported for the BBC, is the profession du volume in this mystery, and the events are pretty co-incidental and wildly out of the ordinary - and there is no murder being investigated, not that there aren't any attempts.

Awards

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1999

Physical description

200 p.; 17.6 cm

ISBN

0330391933 / 9780330391931

Local notes

Omslag: Ikke angivet
Omslagsfoto: Tony Hutchings
Omslaget viser et glas med en voldsom strømhvirvel i - måske en storm i et glas vand?
Indskannet omslag - N650U - 150 dpi

En henvisning til et digt af Robert Browning:
Side 162: I have to take the bad news from Aix to Ghent.
Side 168: "How they brought the good news from Ghent to Aix.
Side 243: Did a murderer, I wondered, live deep within us all?

Other editions

Stormvarsel by Dick Francis (Hardcover)

Pages

200

Library's rating

Rating

(198 ratings; 3.4)

DDC/MDS

823.914
Page: 0.5428 seconds