Mrs. Virgil (Emily) Pollifax of New Brunswick, New Jersey, was a widow with grown, married children. She was tired of attending her Garden Club meetings. She wanted to do something good for her country. So, naturally, she became a CIA agent.
She takes on a “job” in Mexico City. The assignment doesn’t sound dangerous at first, but then, as often happens, something goes wrong. Now our dear Mrs. Pollifax finds herself embroiled in quite a hot Cold War—and her country’s enemies find themselves entangled with one unbelievably feisty lady.
“Should delight you whether you’re looking for smiles or thrills.” —The New York Times Book Review
“Mrs. Pollifax gives Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple a rival to reckon with.” —Toronto Star
Dorothy Edith Gilman started writing when she was 9 and knew early on she was to be a writer. At 11, she competed against 10 to 16-year-olds in a story contest and won first place. She attended Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and briefly the University of Pennsylvania. She planned to write and illustrate children's books. She married Edgar A. Butters Jr, in 1945, this ended in divorce in 1965. Dorothy worked as an art teacher & telephone operator before becoming an author. She wrote children’s stories for more than ten years under the name Dorothy Gilman Butters and then began writing adult novels about Mrs. Pollifax–a retired grandmother who becomes a CIA agent. The Mrs. Pollifax series made Dorothy famous. While her stories nourish people’s thirst for adventure and mystery, Dorothy knew about nourishing the body as well. On her farm in Nova Scotia, she grew medicinal herbs and used this knowledge of herbs in many of her stories, including A Nun in the Closet. She travelled extensively, and used these experiences in her novels as well. Many of Dorothy’s books, feature strong women having adventures around the world. In 2010 Gilman was awarded the annual Grand Master Award by the Mystery Writers of America. Dorothy spent much of her life in Connecticut, New Mexico, and Maine. She died at age 88 of complications of Alzheimer's disease. She is survived by two sons, Christopher Butters and Jonathan Butters; and two grandchildren.
You know what's lovely about Mrs. Pollifax? She's unabashedly enthusiastic about travel and about meeting people from other cultures. Published in 1966, it certainly speaks to simpler times, or perhaps different times. Definitely different times. Lots of Cold War spy drama, if I remember my James Bond movies correctly. Gilman's elevator pitch was to take James Bond out of the picture, and put an adorable little white-haired grandmother in it. Haha! Isn't that funny!? Remember--1966. That's the premise. We aren't meta-navel-gazers yet, people; there's very little post-mod nod-send-up here. Anyways.
It opens with Mrs. Pollifax contemplating the recent occasion she contemplated suicide. That's quite an opener. I think, back then, it must have been meant by the author as representing Mrs. P's extreme emotion and not something played for laughs. But it was a bit disconcerting reading such exposition, and to then switch into 'applying-to-be-a-spy" mode. Because, of course, way forward in the future here-and-now, we actually understand that suicide is a real and sadly common event.
At any rate, then it takes off rather nicely, semi-plausibly (1966, people, 1966), with a typical mistaken-identity thing: Mrs. P. is shown to a waiting room in the new CIA headquarters at the same time a legitimate applicant is expected. A simple job turns into a disaster--of course--but you just know that Mrs. P's Can-Do-Spirit is going to get her through, along with her amazing ability to connect with others. No, no secret skills, beyond volunteering her time, being unsuspected of sneakiness (1966 here) and a giant purse. I'll forebear mentioning exactly what happens, but the short version is that her trip to Mexico lands her in an Eastern European prison. The real benefit here is that it didn't feel sappy, or saccharine in a way I associate with cozy mysteries. It felt like a rather determined, resourceful person making-do while spy stuff happened around her. I hate to damn it with faint praise, because I'm really not, but it's kind of a Girl Scout book, in the best, pre-modern-sense of the word.
It wasn't an amazing story, but for a day or two after--and this is the truly unexpected part--I actually felt kind of positive about the world. I mean, Mrs. P. survives because she really does approach each person with an open heart (to be Buddhist about it), and even when circumstances veer towards suspicion, gives them the benefit of the doubt. Or powers on, and gives them the opportunity to change. It's charming, really. I think I felt my heart grow two sizes, at least for a little while.
I first read a few books in this series sometime in the mid-nineties. I remembered being mildly entertained, and when I was looking for a series for The Mom, this came to mind. Well, also because it is in large print, which is her preferred format these days. Anyways, I read it as well, out of mild curiosity and milder boredom.
The Mom liked it too, although she did refer to it as "that book with the old lady," which I found very ironic. But I kept that to myself.
Cold War spy thriller, written in 1966, that manages to be both cozy and steely. For the uninitiated (like me), this is the first book in a series of old-fashioned Cold War spy novels, featuring one Mrs. Pollifax. She's a rather fluffy, quirky and kindhearted lady in her 60s, with an unexpected core of steel. You have to like her.
Mrs. Pollifax is a widow who lives alone, and her despair at the monotony and lack of excitement in her life leads her to take a trip to the CIA offices in Washington DC and offer herself up as a spy. Surprisingly, they take her up on it. More surprisingly (at least for the CIA), her adventure in Mexico City - she was supposed to do a simple courier job - turns out to be a lot more dangerous than anyone expected.
It’s a quick read, mixing seriousness and humor, and it’s great to see Mrs. Pollifax rise to the occasion when things get tense and deadly and difficult. It’s easy to see that this was written in the sixties; it has some stereotype characters and definitely isn’t “woke,” despite the female author and main character, so don’t bother digging this book up if some dated social attitudes are going to grate. On the plus side, though, Mrs. Pollifax definitely pushes far beyond the expectations that people have for an older woman.
My friend Hana's advice to me made me laugh: "You just have to be in the mood and try and forget that the people the CIA was actually hiring at the time were more along the lines of mobsters like Sam Giancana than little old ladies with flowered hats :D ... If it's a first read and you treat the whole series as something akin to parallel history time travel you will love it!"
What if James Bond were someone's grandma? Unexpected. I thought this would be a bit fluffy, and it was. But it also went a bit darker than I thought a book written in the late 60s about a widowed grandmother would go.
It starts with Mrs. Pollifax recalling a feeling of uselessness so deep that she almost stepped off the roof of her apartment building. Oh. Yeah. That's not good. So it occurs to her that if she has nothing left to lose, she might as well shoot for the stars and pursue her girlhood dream of being a spy. I've often thought I'd become a P.I. or a bounty hunter after all the kids get gone. No one would see my shit coming... And with that in mind, she heads down to the local CIA office and tells them she wants a job. Due to a mix-up, she's brought on board as a courier. All she has to do is go on vacation in Mexico, act like a normal tourist, and then go to a bookshop and ask the owner for a certain book. She then comes home with said book. The end.
But that would make for a terrible story! In this one, spoilery things happen, and she ends up trapped in an Albanian prison. With her is another spy who ends up badly beaten after interrogation and with a broken leg after a failed attempt to kill himself by jumping off a cliff. She has no training, no real skills, and no hope that anyone is coming to save them. But she does have a set of cards to play Solitare with and a big purse.
One thing I do think readers should be aware of going in is that this is not an action-packed spy thriller. It actually does have a lot in common with Bond books, though, in that a bit of luck and a lot of determination not to die play a big part in the plot. And while Bond has a smarmy type of sex appeal, Mrs. Pollifax has kick-ass people skills.
Plus, you know she makes it because there are 14 books in Mrs. Pollifax's series. I don't know that I'll read any more of these because spy stories just aren't my jam. But I'm not sorry that I read this one, either. Recommended for fans of your grandmother's CIA.
I thought I should change my tone here a bit. I've "recently reviewed some audio books, mysteries that I listened to mainly because, well, I was looking for...a book. I figured any book was better than no book. My wife loved whatever series it might happen to be and I listened to them because we had them out of the library anyway.... I wasn't all that taken with many of them. They were sometimes well written, others not. Either I liked or didn't like the main character that much. On the whole I've listened to a lot of audio books I didn't care for much or liked only a little.
That is not the case with Dorothy Gilman's Mrs. Pollifax...I'm not ordinarily a mystery fan, but these are wonderful books (and don't really fit "neatly" under the mystery heading). Again I picked the first up for my wife to listen to, listened to it as I drove (my job involved a lot of driving) after she was finished with it, and found it fantastic. I come very close to giving this a 5 star rating and would call it a 4.5.
When Mrs. Pollifax comes to the CIA and "accidentally" finds herself heading to Mexico then ends up in an Albanian prison (1966 Cold War era communist Albanian behind the Iron Curtain Albania) then manages to save the day it cracks me up. In a plot that should strain the ability to suspend disbelief good story telling and humor not only saves all but drives the novel forward. I tracked several of these down for my wife...and myself. These are good.
This is a charming mystery that may require two things of the reader to be thoroughly enjoyed: a recognition that it was written over 50 years ago, and the ability to suspend disbelief and not take things too seriously. It is a humorous, fun, old-fashioned spy novel which takes place during the Cold War. White-haired Mrs. Pollifax with her extravagant hat, resourcefulness, and her persistent optimism is such an endearing character and this particular adventure which takes place in Mexico City and then behind the Iron Curtain in Albania is very entertaining. This light read is the first of Dorothy Gilman's Mrs. Pollifax series and was so enjoyable that I will read the next one. The audio version contains no profanity, violence or gore, and is fun to listen to.
Who doesn't love Mrs. Pollifax--or the novels chronicling her preposterous but weirdly believable adventures?
For the uninitiated (and rush out to initiate yourselves, already!), this is the first Mrs. Pollifax novel. She is a widow living in New Jersey in the 1960s, feeling depressed--not so much because she's a widow as because she feels useless. She was able to go along in life so long as people needed her, but now she's questioning the very basis of her existence. I suspect many women in their sixties experience these feelings, and here they are handled briskly and without unnecessary sentiment. Mrs. Pollifax's situation is poignant enough, and it's what she does about it that matters.
For she's not so lost in sadness that she has forgotten to dream--and what she has always dreamed about is being a spy. Whyever not? It's the depths of the Cold War and she's as patriotic as the next widow from New Jersey. She loves her geraniums but they simply aren't cutting it for her anymore. So off she goes to offer herself up to the CIA.
Through an amusing concatenation of coincidences, she's actually hired as a courier, and we're launched on a rollicking adventure, about which I shall tell you nothing because I wouldn't spoil it for you for the world. These novels are light entertainment on the surface, but are in fact a much deeper emotional experience than that implies. There is real danger and real evil, but what matters is how Mrs. Pollifax is tested and how her character is honed by events. The spy saga is just the fancy dress around a beautifully told tale of how life can challenge an ordinary person and that person can prove to be great. Mrs. Pollifax is great and she specializes in offering others their own opportunity for greatness. She succeeds through grit and goodness, and it's impossible not to root for her.
4 Stars - A solid good old fashioned spy mystery with an unforgettable grey haired lovely lady. - Impressed and surprised.
An oldie spy novel —next to classical— from 1970. Book #1 of a big bunch. I downloaded the 8:16 hrs audiobook (a 2010 edition) narrated by Barbara Rosenblat... and I LOVED it.
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« Mrs. Virgil (Emily) Pollifax of New Brunswick, New Jersey, was a widow with grown children. She was tired of attending her Garden Club meetings. She wanted to do something good for her country. This first in the series sends Emily on her first case after she successfully persuades a skeptical CIA recruitment officer that she is the best person for the job. »
. . .
‘It wasn’t that she had so much character, thought Mrs. Pollifax, but rather that always in her life she had found it difficult to submit.’
Yes, of course you feel that it's been 45 years sinceThe Unexpected Mrs Pollifax first was published, but this was excellent. Truly enjoying audiobook entertainment in the old school spy thriller genre. Not always believable but with heart. Add a FANTASTIC narration from Mrs Rosenblat.
Gosh, so much fun! ~ Even old housewife ladies perform great deeds and surprise you in the case of national security.
Delightful! Emily Pollifax is an endearing and incomparable character and the very best thing about this book/series so far. I appreciate it too that I’m now in her age group and maybe it is a good thing that I waited until now to make her acquaintance. She’s a hoot.
Some of the other characters are wonderful as well. I really enjoyed all the sections. Home, Mexico, and the adventure that makes up a long section toward the end of the book, and the end/conclusion too.
Highly amusing, Touching.
I found some of the politics, what is now highly fictionalized historical fiction, to be tedious but when Mrs. Polifax explains democracy and how the legal court system works that is priceless. Just marvelous. I didn’t like most of the “Cold War” portions but the rest was incredibly entertaining and a perfect diversion, so I forgave the anachronisms.
Definitely a fun comfort read! I would like to continue and read the other thirteen books in the series. I’m also interested is seeing the two movies based on this character.
Due to COVID-19 I read a Kindle e-book edition borrowed from my public library.
I LOVE LOVE LOVE these books. I have the whole series and have gotten both my mother, my MIL and my Auntie-in-law totally hooked on these books. WE LOVE THEM! Where else can you find an older woman, bored with her life, who goes and applies to be in the CIA?? Its amazing. YES, some of the stories are far-fetched, but to me, that just adds to the intrigue of these books. This is the first one and I recommend them to ANYONE! ^^I first read these books in Readers Digest Condensed when I was a teen and lived with my grandparents. I loved it when a new book would come and it would have a Mrs. Pollifax book in it. So it was with great pleasure when I was able to buy the series in paperback and have them all the time. I know I have read them more than twice, but since I don't remember the date when I first started buying the in paperback [and reading them as I bought them], we will have to be satisfied with just the two dates I have.
I had forgotten a lot of things that happened in this book; I had had them happening in a later book. It was so good to read this again and revisit the world of Emily Pollifax. I highly recommend these books to anyone who loves a little mystery and a lot of adventure.
I have been transported back to 1966 when the book was written. A world of men who are spies that served in WWII and now are fighting communist both Chinese and Russian. The descriptions are great of travel. How Gimbels is still in business. Mrs Pollifax is looking for meaning in her life now that she is in her mid 60's (might I say a very youngish age). The story how of luck, perseverance and ingenuity saves people lives. I found the book so enjoyable, and I look forward to the next.
April 5 2020 I just realized in re-reading this that I am approx. Mrs Pollifax's age now. You must realize that when I first read this story I was in my 20's. I loved the story, and loved Mrs Pollifax's wisdom, her ways that she was able to adept to new situations and her quirky humor and I hoped that I would have all that when I was her age. I think that I maybe managed the humor part... Working hard on the rest!
Finally, I've cleared almost all of my August library books (just one remaining) and I can turn my attention to Halloween Bingo! Happy, happy, joy, joy! And after a fairly long immersion in Fantasy and Science Fiction, I felt the need for something fluffy and fun. Mrs. Pollifax filled the bill nicely.
Emily Pollifax is so bored that she has contemplated walking off the roof of her building. She visits her doctor, who gives excellent advice: do what you wanted to do when you were young (although he ruins it by laughing at her aspirations). What Emily really wanted was to be a spy, so she sets off to the offices of the CIA to offer her services. Because what else would one do?
There's a lot of humour in the depiction of the CIA (I'm pretty sure actual employees would either cringe or laugh hysterically) and in the role of the older woman (we always get overlooked and underestimated). But since older women are effectively invisible in our society, we would be able to blend in well. I'll be waiting for my recruiting visit from CSIS. Haha!
I had to keep reminding myself that this was published in 1966. The past is truly a different country. Some things haven't changed: Russia and China are the adversaries. As a result, there's a lot of anti-Asian prejudice that doesn't feel good today. But despite that, I was charmed by Mrs. Pollifax and will read on in this series when I get a chance.
A lovely first foray into Bingo. I read this book for the free square, a strategic move to facilitate a speedy completion of a first row!
1-Star DNF @ 34% for Mrs Pollifax" Commenced: July 10, 2025 Heard: 02:43 Hours - Balance: 05:33 Hours I suspected this would be the equivalent of a "Cozy Mystery", but I agreed to a GR friend's suggestion that I at least "try one" of my collection of "Mrs Pollifax" audiobooks. I tried but gave up @ 34%. 'Cozies' are not for me :))
I love all the Dorothy Gilman books, the Mrs. Pollifax mystery series as well as her other books outside the famous series.
I'm reading my way through a couple of dozen of them now, back-to-back.
What fun.
I adore her deep insights about all kinds of people and the spiritual phenomena we encounter in every day life.
Her stories always reveal the value of various kinds of people society tends to ignore (unmarried, middle-aged, and elderly people as well as minorities, misfits, outcasts, ...).
I’ve appreciated Dorothy Gilman for years. It’s her individual work that I know. It shows a writer needn’t worry about doing something different from “the expected” because I am a fan of her standalone books. Two are hard to acquire and it was quite a feather in my cap when I did: her autobiography and “The Maze In The Heart Of The Castle”. I have written in the past that if I enjoy all of that so much; I can only surmise that the books responsible for her fame will be excellent indeed. The day has come that I’ve begun her long-enduring series. Her début, “The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax”, 1966, is as good as I imagined!
A 63 year-old CIA spy is original; amidst countless 20 year-olds, or vampire huntresses in literature. Uniqueness is in common with all Dorothy’s masterpieces. So is her success with identifiable personalities, who draw you in. You like ‘Emily’ and understand her plight to defy convention; to do what she truly wished to do for a living. So many of us answer the responsibility of churning out paycheques but haven’t the courage to turn our dream careers into reality; or at least experiment with what works. Along with the most down-to-Earth character to ever grace the written word, perhaps this audacity and honesty are what has resonated with billions of fans.
The journey Emily dives into as a CIA courier is rough. If I weren’t familiar with “Uncertain Voyage”, published the following year; I’d have been shocked by the deprivation and difficulty depicted. The impossibility of escape and the way a mere bath becomes a luxury to strive for, are conveyed sharply. What struck me most is that despite there being a veteran spy, the outcome would have been wholly different without Emily’s earnest self.
P.S. Sixty-three years-old is not elderly! I am glad that notion smartened-up since 1966. People who review this book: STOP copying “elderly” from the synopsis!
I would never have picked this book up without encouragement from a bookish friend. Mrs. Pollifax is the most unique, sweet, quirky, loveable spy I have ever read about. This had me obsessed with the first page. I will be sure to continue reading this series. Talk about not judging a book by it's cover.
Emily Pollifax is a combination of Golden Girl Rose, Miss Marple, Aunt Augusta and Lara Croft! This is a wildly improbable and impossible adventure. Mrs Pollifax presents herself at CIA HQ one day saying that she wants to be a spy and is promptly given an assignment in Mexico City. Needless to say, it all goes wrong and here I will stop to avoid spoilers.
I really enjoyed reading this. It’s great fun but also has a serious side (Russian and Chinese involvement in South America and Albania). It’s a true page turner as the sticky situation Mrs Pollifax finds herself in becomes even stickier and ultimately very dangerous. I will definitely be continuing with this series. I’ve been hearing about Mrs Pollifax for years through Goodreads and am delighted to have met her at last!
Just one thing that is preying on my mind:
With thanks to NetGalley and Duckworth Books for a review copy.
Feeling as if her life had no meaning, now that her children were grown and living far away, the widowed Mrs. Emily Pollifax of New Brunswick, New Jersey was slipping into a depression when a doctor's visit prompted her to take matters in hand, changing the course of her life. Recalling her childhood desire to be a spy, the retired lady headed to Washington, D.C., there to offer her services to the CIA. To say that she was unexpected would be an understatement, and no one, from the hard-bitten Mr. Carstairs, who made the unusual choice to give her a job, to Mrs. Pollifax herself, could have predicted the extraordinary adventure ahead. From Mexico City to mountainous Albania, this wholly unconventional heroine won allies in unexpected places, revealed unexpected skills and grit, and triumphed over extreme (and unexpected) challenges...
A book I read countless times as an adolescent, The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax is the perfect blend of exciting adventure story and endearingly humorous character study. It's a Cold War spy novel with a cozy, heartwarming feeling to it, a fabulous sense of humor, and an engaging, endearing, unexpected heroine. Stories of espionage are not a particular favorite of mine - save for this series, I can't think of many others I have read, off the top of my head - but the Mrs. Pollifax books have always been a reading pleasure. This one, in particular, is simply marvelous, and I can never read it without chuckling in appreciation at its many humorous scenes, or racing along in suspense at its more action-driven sequences. The settings are fascinating, and I credit this book, read sometime when I was twelve or thirteen, with inspiring in me an interest in the small, mountainous nation of Albania. I'm not sure why it came to mind today, four weeks into this extraordinary quarantine, but when it did, I immediately sought out a digital edition, and read it again for the first time in years. It did not disappoint, and I am off to reread the entire series! Highly recommended to anyone who enjoys adventure or spy stories with somewhat unusual (one might almost say unexpected) characters...
When I first saw one of the books in the Mrs. Pollifax series, I assumed it was another cozy mystery. I was expecting an American Miss Marple.
Now that I've read it, I wouldn't necessarily call it a cozy "mystery" series, but it certainly is a fun spy novel. I think of it as a Jessica Fletcher-meets-John le Carré kind of tale.
This first book in the series shows us how an unassuming Mrs. Emily Pollifax leaves her elderly suburban life to depart on a spy adventure in Mexico. She begins the story as a bored and depressed senior citizen, but ends up a wise and worldly traveler, ready for more adventure. The story is exciting and entertaining, as implausible as it may be.
Mrs. Pollifax is plucky, persistent and determined and a thoroughly enjoyable character. Overall, I found this to be a very fun, quick read and I will certainly read more of the stories in this series.
It's taken me forever to read one of these Mrs. Pollifax books because I just didn't think a book could be entertaining enough for me with the heroin being an old lady. But then my sister told me how much she loves these books and how wonderfully fun and charming they are... she even lent me her entire collection to read (thanks, Mandy!) and I have been so delighted with these fun books and this charming character, Mrs. Pollifax. I couldn't have been more wrong or narrow-minded! It's so fun getting to read about all her adventures and the laughs are plentiful. I highly recommend these books.
Seeking to give her life meaning, widowed Mrs. Pollifax applies to be a spy with the CIA. She's sent on a simple currier assignment for Carstairs, but things go wrong and she is kidnapped. Can she use her wits to escape? The story is highly improbable, but I absolutely fell in love. The final third still make me turn pages quickly even though I remember all the twists from the first time it kept me up all night to finish.
Mrs. Pollifax.....a pleasant sixty-something widow from NJ who decides to ask the CIA if she can help her country as an inconspicuous spy. Written in 1966 with lots of Cold War complications, this was a fun little book. I'm sure I'll come back to this series when I need a change from darker novels.
"Do you feel you're a particularly creative person?" Mrs. Pollifax smiled. "Goodness, I don't know. I'm just — me." He ignored that, saying very seriously, "It's terribly important for everyone, at any age, to live to his full potential. Otherwise a kind of dry rot sets in, a rust, a disintegration of personality."
La señora Pollifax es una viuda como de sesenta años que encuentra su vida vacía (incluso menciona saltar de su edificio), una visita al medico donde este le aconseja seguir uno de sus sueños incumplidos le lleva a recordar que siendo niña quería ser espía, así que va a la CIA y por una serie de malentendidos le confieren la misión de ir a recoger un paquete a México.
Este es un libro de espías del tiempo de la Guerra Fría, donde los comunistas son los malos, hay menciones de Cuba, Rusia , China, y la mayor parte de la novela transcurre en Albania.
Soy fan de "El Espantapájaros y la señora King" (1983) , y esto sigue esta linea.
Emilly Pollifax es una mujer que es entre ingenua y sensata, y con una extraña suerte. Es genial verla experimentar el viaje y la emoción de lo que esta haciendo, y luego como todo marcha mal.
Hay momentos absurdos, y otros más oscuros.
Recuerdo vagamente haber visto la película en la versión de Rosalind Russell de 1973 , muy entretenida. Hay una versión fílmica de Angela Landsbury en 1999, pero Angela no tiene el quirk de Russell.
Nota: Libros mencionados: "Historia de dos ciudades". "77 formas de jugar solitario"["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
I have a new literary heroine -- Mrs. Pollifax is a bored senior who decides to apply to work for the C.I.A. as a spy. Her first assignment takes her to Mexico, and then to Albania, of all places, where she must dig deep to overcome the most life-threatening physical challenges. This book was published in 1966. Here's my general observation on older books. When I read contemporary "light fiction," it does not stand up well to the writing characterized as light fiction written decades ago, as is the case with The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax. Light fiction, mysteries, and spy novels written in the past are often so much deeper, richer, and more complex -- not to mention being better written. This book is a perfect example. I can only assume sadly that fiction writing in general has been in decline for some time.
Thoroughly enjoyable, and God bless Mrs Pollifax for being a spunky, resourceful sexagenarian. She always wanted to become a spy for the CIA, finally gets her chance on a simple assignment, the whole thing goes awry, and she and another spy are kidnapped. Leave it to her to get them out of every jam that comes their way. Like I said, she's resourceful.
I might be convinced at some point to read the other books in the series.
I love well-developed and interesting characters and Mrs. Pollifax excels on both counts.
This was fun and extremely well-written (imagine Miss Marple joining the CIA and you'll get a sense of what this book is about.) It's classified as a mystery but it's really much more than that.
I don't exactly recall how I came across this series (which first came out in the '80s) on Goodreads but I'm thrilled that I did. As an added, bonus when I purchased the first book it came as part of a three book collection and I'm quite looking forward to reading the others.
Mrs. Virgil (Emily) Pollifax of New Brunswick, New Jersey, was a widow with grown, married children. She was tired of attending her Garden Club meetings. She wanted to do something good for her country. So, naturally, she became a CIA agent.
She takes on a “job” in Mexico City. The assignment doesn’t sound dangerous at first, but then, as often happens, something goes wrong. Now our dear Mrs. Pollifax finds herself embroiled in quite a hot Cold War—and her country’s enemies find themselves entangled with one unbelievably feisty lady.
My Thoughts /
3.5 rounded up
In your twilight years? No husband to take care of? Kids all grown up and moved away. Feeling like there's nothing to excite you each morning as you take off to your next volunteering opportunity? Well, good news! This may be one job opportunity you've never thought of taking…..
“But isn’t there something you’ve always longed to do, something you’ve never had either the time or the freedom for until now?” Mrs. Pollifax looked at him. “When I was growing up—oh for years—I planned to become a spy,” she admitted.
Widowed housewife, Mrs. Pollifax fills her days with her volunteer work wheeling the bookcart and working the gift shop at the hospital, rolling bandages, attending the garden club and art association meetings, and joining friends for afternoon teas. Society tells her that should be enough for someone her age. Her age!! She's only in her sixties – not dead. When she comes across a newspaper article profiling an actress who began her on-screen career later in life, Mrs. Pollifax decides to fulfill a childhood dream and apply for a job at the CIA.
First published in 1966. Yes this book is little dated. Yes some of the plot points are a little far fetched. Yes the language may come across as a little twee. But let's just applaud how the author has written a senior female MC who doesn't let age become a barrier. A senior female MC who is not afraid to give the unknown a chance. A female MC who looks upon 'life's experiences' as a plus on a job application. A female MC who is unabashedly comfortable in her own skin.
Sitting in a meeting room alone at the headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency, Mrs. P is mistakenly identified as another long-term undercover agent. Discussing potential jobs, Mrs P has no idea that the CIA think they are speaking with someone else. But Mrs P is overjoyed and happily agrees to the job. She's thrilled to be sent to Mexico on her first "secret mission". What's even better, is that she's to act as an American tourist and do nothing but touristy things - except on the 19th when she is to go into a bookstore and collect a book. After which she is to return to the US and deliver the book back to the Agency.
Of course the mission does not go as planned; she’s kidnapped, taken to Albania, facing harsh questioning and possible torture by Chinese communists and kept prisoner against her will. There's plenty of solitaire (IYKYK). There's an escape and the ultimate rescue. Ah, all's well that ends well, because in the end, it turns out that everyone underestimates an elderly widow.
I'm not sure how this book came to my attention recently, but I had no idea this series even existed--what was fun is that it is right in line with the current trend of 60 something and older women being involved in solving mysteries and fighting crime but it was published in 1966. While it helps to have an idea of what things were like in the 1960s before 60 was the new 50/40 (depending on what you read), one of my 20 something children is enjoying this for some light reading.
Mrs. Pollifax, widowed with both of her children married and living far away, thinks there must be more to life than her garden club and charities, so she travels from New Jersey to Washington, DC to sign up with the CIA. This is set during the Cold War, but was a contemporary novel so the writing is authentic for the time. She is sent to Mexico to act as a courier with no training, but things don't go as planned. I've read three of these now, and so far liked the third one best, but it's fun summer fare.
Mrs. Pollifax is a widowed grandmother in her 60s and feeling the need to do something more than growing geraniums with her remaining years. So she walks into the CIA headquarters, (it's in the phone book), and offers herself as a spy. Through a concatenation of circumstances she ends up travelling to Mexico as a courier. How she ends up in Albania makes a delightful, exciting and heartwarming book.
I first discovered Mrs. P. when I was in college back in the 1970s. A long time ago. I fell in love. I own all of the books and consider them treasures, replacing them reluctantly when they begin to fall apart. They've traveled with me around the US and overseas. My daughter loves her, too. Recently I discovered these books on audio narrated by the wonderful Barbara Rosenblat, and I find them perfect to listen to as I drive, exercise, or especially late at night when I can't sleep.
What makes these stories so good? First, there's Mrs. P's spirit, her love of life and respect for people, and that sense of adventure and desire to live a life that matters that took her to the CIA to volunteer to become a spy. She did it, she says, because she felt her life had become "expendable". But as you read these books you realize she isn't at all expendable - in fact the world needs more people like Emily Pollifax - more people who care about their world and the people in it, who will put themselves at risk to help others, who will take the time to appreciate the world around them.
I can wax a bit poetic about these books, as they are light-hearted, clean, fun books of a type that can be hard to find today. At the same time Mrs. P. herself makes them more. The best books are the first five or six. But read them all, in order if possible, and enjoy! If I could only read one book series for the rest of my life, I'd pick these. :)
NB- Both DD and I had trouble at first with the audio-books, as Mrs. P sounds old in them. But once I got used to that I've enjoyed the audio a lot.