A Seattle Times Best Mystery of the YearA Times of London Best Crime/Thriller Book of the YearA few years before the fall of the Berlin Wall, spook-turned-novelist Edwin Lemaster reveals to up-and-com
This powerfully suspenseful new novel from Dan Fesperman takes us deep into the early 1940s in Switzerland and Germany as it traces the long reach of the wartime intrigues of the White Rose student mo
A gripping new work of suspense about Cold War-era Berlin and a decades-long cover-up that has lethal consequences.West Berlin, 1979. Helen Abell oversees the CIA's network of safe houses, rare havens
Award-winning author Dan Fesperman delivers a suspenseful and stunning thriller set in the mysterious and gleaming city of Dubai.? ?Sam Keller, an auditor at a giant pharmaceutical firm, expected a si
The Amateur Spy recasts the spy novel for the post-9/11 world—anyone might be watching, everyone is suspect. Freeman Lockhart, a humanitarian aid worker and his Bosnian wife have just retired to a cha
Vlado Petric, a former homicide detective in Sarajevo, is now living in exile, and making a meagre living working at a Berlin construction site, when an American investigator for the International War
In a riveting tale of intrigue and betrayal, a journalist and his aide infiltrate Afghanistan on the eve of the American invasion.? Skelly, a jaded war correspondent, is looking for one last scoop.? N
When the body of an American soldier is discovered in Cuban waters near the U.S. detention facility at Guantanamo, Revere Falk, a former FBI agent, is reassigned from his job interrogating an accused
From the widely acclaimed author of The Prisoner of Guantanamo and The Double Game, an electrifying, timely, psychologically gripping descent into the hidden, expanding world of drone warfare.Not very
Who exactly is Danziger? He’s a writer of letters for illiterate immigrants on Manhattan’s Lower East Side—“a steadfast practitioner of concealing and forgetting” for his clients, and perhaps for hi
Who exactly is Danziger? He’s a writer of letters for illiterate immigrants on Manhattan’s Lower East Side—“a steadfast practitioner of concealing and forgetting” for his clients, and perhaps for hi