Picture of author.

Tamar Cohen

Author of Dangerous Crossing

31+ Works 1,289 Members 89 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Tammy Cohen, Rachel Rhys, Tamar Cohen

Works by Tamar Cohen

Dangerous Crossing (2017) 215 copies, 18 reviews
Argylle: A Novel (2022) 213 copies, 4 reviews
A Fatal Inheritance (2018) 120 copies, 7 reviews
The Mistress's Revenge (2011) 119 copies, 16 reviews
When She Was Bad (2016) 102 copies, 7 reviews
Dying for Christmas (2014) 86 copies, 6 reviews
They All Fall Down (2017) 79 copies, 5 reviews
War of the Wives (2012) 71 copies, 9 reviews
The Broken (2014) 60 copies, 4 reviews
First One Missing (2015) 55 copies, 5 reviews
Someone Else's Wedding (2013) 26 copies, 1 review
Stop At Nothing (2019) 19 copies, 2 reviews
Island of Secrets (1920) 13 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Killer Women: Crime Club Anthology #1 (2016) — Contributor — 13 copies
Killer Women: Crime Club Anthology 2: The Body (2017) — Contributor — 7 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Other names
Cohen, Tammy (pseudonym)
Rhys, Rachel (pseudonym)
Birthdate
1963-10-15
Gender
female
Birthplace
Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria
Places of residence
Sierra Leone
California, USA
London, Middlesex, England, UK
Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain
Education
Manchester University
Occupations
teacher
Organizations
Killer Women
Agent
Curtis Brown
Short biography
[from author's website]
I was born in Ibadan, Nigeria where my anthropologist father happened to be doing fieldwork at the time. Sabbatical years in far-flung places were a feature of my childhood and I attended school in both Sierra Leone and California. Otherwise, I mostly grew up in the suburbs of London where my adolescence was spent either in the local library or waiting for the last tube home.

After taking an American Studies degree at Manchester University I taught English in Madrid. While working as a secretary back in London, I started writing features and hand-delivering them to the magazine publishing house around the corner. The day the first one got accepted, I packed in my job and declared myself a freelance journalist, which is basically what I remained for the next twenty years, writing features for national magazines and newspapers, such as Marie Claire, The Times and The Telegraph, and then moving on to non fiction books. My dream was always to write fiction but it wasn't until I was forty-seven that I finally conquered the self doubt and my first novel, The Mistress's Revenge was published.

These days I live in North London with my partner and three (nearly) grown children and one very badly behaved dog. Together with my family I spent four happy years living in Spain from 2004 to 2008 and I live in fear of people finding this out and asking me something in Spanish at which I remain shamefully inept.

Members

Reviews

For some reason I never really clicked into this book. It wasn't badly written, the characters were pretty well fleshed out, there was lots of action, but it never really engaged me as I like to be engaged. Oh well.
 
Flagged
majkia | 3 other reviews | Mar 12, 2024 |
If not for its link with the upcoming movie, this is not a book I would have picked up on my own. I don't reach for spy novels often at all, and "Argylle" hasn't especially persuaded me to read more in the future. It's a little exciting at times, but simultaneously feels like someone fed the Indiana Jones franchise into an AI bot and then said, "Make me another one! And include the CIA!" I also struggled immensely to try and care for any of the characters. Conway does a great job at telling me why I should (like Argylle being an orphan, or really missing his parents, or how he feels like he doesn't fit in) but there was just a lot of disconnect between myself and the characters on the page. The writing is both somehow try-hard and too predictable, like Conway is trying to mimic another author but forgets to add any of her own flair.
However, I WOULD recommend this to certain readers. I think there is definitely an audience that will enjoy this book! It's simply not to my personal taste.
… (more)
1 vote
Flagged
deborahee | 3 other reviews | Feb 23, 2024 |
Superior to the film, and mostly because the film tries to undo a lot of what’s in the book. I don’t care if it is a marketing stunt, I enjoyed this wannabe-spy novel.

Argylle is a lost soul who gets caught up in something big with the CIA. Partly to escape, and partly to be found, he joins a team to chase down a lost artifact before the bad guys find it first. It’s more of an ode to Indiana Jones than James Bond. And that’s likely what kept me interested in the adventure.
 
Flagged
ilkjen | 3 other reviews | Feb 18, 2024 |
I was interested in this book due to the movie coming out soon. However, the book and the movie are not the same thing! In the book, it is a hard-hitting spy thriller, whereas the book is a comedy send up of the alleged author being inserted into the spy novels she writes.
So, because of the differences, the book was not what I expected.
The book is the story of Aubrey Argylle, a CIA agent who was orphaned when his parents were killed. He spent time in the jungles of Thailand, but is called to assist in a Russian spy / jewel heist / political operation. There is a lot of action, quite a bit of violence, and also traitors. It may keep you guessing, but it will definitely take you across the globe!
I liked reading about the possible conspiracy of the Amber Room, as I have been to The Catherine Palace in St. Petersburg!
… (more)
 
Flagged
rmarcin | 3 other reviews | Feb 15, 2024 |

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
31
Also by
2
Members
1,289
Popularity
#19,897
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
89
ISBNs
219
Languages
11

Charts & Graphs