![]() ![]() It’s a book where you will very often find yourself reading a couple of pages and realise those pages could have been digested down into a much shorter sentence. Now this sounds like a great idea doesn’t it? And everything you’d want from this sort of storyline is there, however, unfortunately, the way that Ludlum delivers it can really drag on at times. The premise for the plot of The Bourne Identity is stated above: the book starts with Bourne waking up with no memory and he spends the rest of the book trying to work out where he’s come from with it all being much larger than he could ever have imagined. But is the way that Ludlum writes it engaging or not? Read on to find out. ![]() It’s a great premise for a story: a man doesn’t know why he’s a killing machine so spends the next 450 pages or so finding out all of the secrets of his past. He doesn’t know where he has come from, why he’s ended up where he has and these talents he has are unknown to him. ![]() The Bourne Identity introduces us to Jason Bourne who wakes up without much memory of his previous life. ![]()
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