How to Betray Your Country

Author:   James Wolff
Publisher:   Bitter Lemon Press
ISBN:  

9781913394516


Pages:   310
Publication Date:   15 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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How to Betray Your Country


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Overview

Following on from the acclaimed debut novel Beside the Syrian Sea, this is the second title in a planned trilogy about loyalty and betrayal in the modern world Things are looking bad for disgraced spy August Drummond. In emotional free fall after the death of his wife, fired for a series of security breaches...and now his neighbour on the flight to Istanbul won't stop talking. The only thing keeping August sane is the hunch that there's something not quite right about the nervous young man several rows ahead - a hunch confirmed when August watches him throw away directions to a European cemetery seconds before being detained by Turkish police. A reckless August decides to go to the cemetery, where he meets a mysterious figure from the dark heart of the Islamic State and quickly finds himself drawn into a shadowy plot to murder an Iranian scientist in Istanbul. But nothing is what it seems, and before long August realises he has gone too far to turn back. As he struggles to break free from the clutches of Islamic State and play off British intelligence against their Turkish counterparts, he will find his resourcefulness, ingenuity and courage tested to the very limit of what he can endure.

Full Product Details

Author:   James Wolff
Publisher:   Bitter Lemon Press
Imprint:   Bitter Lemon Press
ISBN:  

9781913394516


ISBN 10:   1913394514
Pages:   310
Publication Date:   15 April 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

PW STARRED REVIEW: Brilliant sequel to 2018's Beside the Syrian Sea. James Wolff skillfully portrays an espionage agent on the verge of losing himself to his demons. This is spy fiction like no other. Publishers Weekly Picked by Simon Sebag Montefiori as one of Best Books of 2018 in the Evening Standard. Great espionage novels are not genre pieces but studies of betrayal, dishonour, expediency, loyalty -- the darkness of human nature, the subjects of all literature. Unsurprisingly, it's hard to find good ones but I just finished Beside the Syrian Sea by James Wolff, a debut by an ex-spy, is superb: an adventure from London to Lebanon and Syria and the desperate struggle for survival in the face of war and betrayal. Wolff is a new maestro. RADIO TIMES James Naughtie Having confessed my addiction to crime, I should also admit that a good spy story will always have me hooked. Beside the Syrian Sea, by James Wolff. His name is a pseudonym, for reasons that most readers will guess is connected to his job, because this is an account of a hostage-taking in the Middle East and the efforts of a renegade MI5 officer to rescue his father, and it trembles with realistic detail. I know we'll hear more of him. BOOK OF THE MONTH TIMES That James Wolff is a pseudonym should come as no surprise to the reader of Beside the Syrian Sea, his superb debut. The writer has obviously been somewhere or something in the spy business. His flawed spy hero, Jonas Worth, is out of his depth when confronted with news that his aged father has been kidnapped by Islamic State and will be soon executed if a large ransom is not paid. Worth, a lonely figure, muddles away, stealing some top-secret documents that he tries to use to bargain with Isis. Much happens along the way. This important book...brought home the complex and shifting situation in the Middle East and the danger of looking for simple explanations. I loved Jonas - the quiet man pushed by his own guilt into becoming a hero. -- Ann Cleeves, author of the Vera Stanhope series. Great characters, convincing detail and a compelling story. All too human MI6 desk jockey, Jonas, is no James Bond but he manages to stay one step ahead of his ex-employers, the CIA, Hezbollah, Isis and the reader right up until the final showdown in the desert. --Charlie Higson, author of The Young Bond series James Wolff clearly knows in detail the complex and murky world of Middle Eastern intrigue. An intelligent, exciting and wholly convincing novel . --Piers Paul Read, author of Alive and The Misogynist. A gripping tale of plots and counterplots; of militias, spies, and priests; of love of family and loyalty to cause. --Emma Sky, author of The Unravelling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq.


Picked by Simon Sebag Montefiori as one of Best Books of 2018 in the Evening Standard. Great espionage novels are not genre pieces but studies of betrayal, dishonour, expediency, loyalty -- the darkness of human nature, the subjects of all literature. Unsurprisingly, it's hard to find good ones but I just finished Beside the Syrian Sea by James Wolff, a debut by an ex-spy, is superb: an adventure from London to Lebanon and Syria and the desperate struggle for survival in the face of war and betrayal. Wolff is a new maestro. RADIO TIMES James Naughtie Having confessed my addiction to crime, I should also admit that a good spy story will always have me hooked. Beside the Syrian Sea, by James Wolff. His name is a pseudonym, for reasons that most readers will guess is connected to his job, because this is an account of a hostage-taking in the Middle East and the efforts of a renegade MI5 officer to rescue his father, and it trembles with realistic detail. I know we'll hear more of him. BOOK OF THE MONTH TIMES That James Wolff is a pseudonym should come as no surprise to the reader of Beside the Syrian Sea, his superb debut. The writer has obviously been somewhere or something in the spy business. His flawed spy hero, Jonas Worth, is out of his depth when confronted with news that his aged father has been kidnapped by Islamic State and will be soon executed if a large ransom is not paid. Worth, a lonely figure, muddles away, stealing some top-secret documents that he tries to use to bargain with Isis. Much happens along the way. This important book...brought home the complex and shifting situation in the Middle East and the danger of looking for simple explanations. I loved Jonas - the quiet man pushed by his own guilt into becoming a hero. -- Ann Cleeves, author of the Vera Stanhope series. Great characters, convincing detail and a compelling story. All too human MI6 desk jockey, Jonas, is no James Bond but he manages to stay one step ahead of his ex-employers, the CIA, Hezbollah, Isis and the reader right up until the final showdown in the desert. --Charlie Higson, author of The Young Bond series James Wolff clearly knows in detail the complex and murky world of Middle Eastern intrigue. An intelligent, exciting and wholly convincing novel . --Piers Paul Read, author of Alive and The Misogynist. A gripping tale of plots and counterplots; of militias, spies, and priests; of love of family and loyalty to cause. --Emma Sky, author of The Unravelling: High Hopes and Missed Opportunities in Iraq.


Author Information

James Wolff lives in London. He has been working for the British government for the last 10 years. This is his second novel in a planned trilogy about anti-terror espionage in the Middle East. The first was the highly acclaimed “Beside the Syrian Sea.”

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