From the master of modern fictional espionage and author of Damascus Station and The Persian comes another nail-bitingly suspenseful and highly topical spy thriller, as the CIA and MI6 begin spying on each other whilst numerous agents start turning up dead.
Artemis Procter returns in David McCloskey’s electrifying new spy thriller, where London has devolved into a covert battleground between British and American intelligence services.
What if the CIA and British intelligence began spying on each other? This is the question at the heart of David McCloskey’s thrilling fifth novel. A new US Administration has taken office, installing a brash and unconventional CIA Director determined to disrupt the Agency and sceptical of its close relationship with their cousins across the Atlantic. Case officers, including newly installed London Chief of Station, Artemis Procter, must now navigate a tense environment as old friends become adversaries and no one knows who to trust. When agents run by both services begin dying, Procter and her team at London Station must decide whether loyalty to the Mission and their friends means disobeying the Agency they serve.
Immersing readers in the technological revolution upending intelligence tradecraft, David McCloskey’s brilliant new thriller depicts the nuts-and-bolts mechanics of how CIA and MI6 collaborate and explores what happens when politics threaten to destroy the ‘Special Relationship’ between America and Britain.
Publisher: Swift Press
ISBN: 9781800757486
Number of pages: 432
Dimensions: 234 x 153 mm
Language: English
'Quite literally, this is not just McCloskey’s best book by far, it is the best spy novel I have ever read: brilliantly written and plotted' - Antony Beevor, military historian and Sunday Times #1 bestselling author of Russia: Revolution and Civil War, 1917-1921
Praise for David McCloskey 'A great spy writer' Tim Shipman 'The top spy writer of these wild turbulent times' Simon Sebag Montefiore ‘One of the best – and most authentic – spy thrillers in years’ The Times on Damascus Station
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