I am a psychiatrist, novelist, and former diplomat, who served overseas in Europe, Russia, Mexico, and India. My diplomatic travels took me to over 70 countries over many decades. I have always been passionate about spy thrillers, because they highlight the intrigue, drama, psychology, and history of different cultures, which brings out the humanity, courage, and tragedy of the characters therein. The best spy thrillers also capture a sense of place, culture, and history, and possess an authenticity that gives them a broader, universal appeal.
Lawler, as a former CIA case officer, brings tremendous authenticity and verve to his spy novels, and The Traitor’s Tale is no different.
I loved the fast-moving, vibrant plot, and I appreciated the characters, both the protagonists (especially Ambrose, Shawnee Chasing Hawk, and Gary Trichter). I enjoyed the intricate plot of espionage, recruitment, betrayal, a love story, and its finale.
Lawler’s book appealed to me because it reveals the very human side of espionage, which, in the end, is about relationships between human beings—between intelligence officers and their agents/spies.
Ambrose Knight--a highly decorated CIA case officer, top spy recruiter, and member of The Guild--is suspected of espionage and treated as a pariah by many Agency colleagues and friends. After several months of purgatory, he's exonerated when another case officer's treachery is revealed. Embittered by the accusations and Agency racial discrimination due to his African American ethnicity, Knight volunteers to the Russian intelligence service and begins living a double life."The Red Queen", a senior female FBI agent who heads the CIA's Counterespionage Group (the mole hunters), claims that Knight is in fact still a spy and has been all along,…
I have always enjoyed McCloskey’s spy novels, especially those set in the Middle East.
His newest, a tale of espionage and betrayal set in Iran, appealed to me because of its characters—an Iranian dentist recruited by Mossad as an agent, his Mossad spy handler, and their Iranian adversaries. I loved the realism and grittiness of this tale, and its portrayal of the human costs of espionage, and its betrayals, fault lines, and tragedies.
I love how McCloskey, a former CIA analyst, humanizes his characters, both the Israelis and the Iranians, showing us their human frailties, loyalties, and passions.
Kamran Esfahani, a dentist living out a dreary existence in Stockholm, agrees to spy for the Mossad after he's recruited by Arik Glitzman, the chief of a clandestine unit tasked with running targeted assassinations and sabotage inside Iran. At Glitzman's direction, Kam returns to his native Tehran and opens a dental practice there, using it as a cover for the Israeli intelligence agency. Kam proves to be a skillful asset, quietly earning money helping Glitzman smuggle weapons, run surveillance, and conduct kidnappings. But when Kam tries to recruit an Iranian widow seeking to avenge the death of her husband at…
It is April 1st, 2038. Day 60 of China's blockade of the rebel island of Taiwan.
The US government has agreed to provide Taiwan with a weapons system so advanced that it can disrupt the balance of power in the region. But what pilot would be crazy enough to run…
I have always loved Vidich’s portrayals of the Cold War between the USSR (now Russia) and the West, and his newest novel appealed to me because of its modern-day version of this struggle.
I liked the plot and characters, especially the protagonist Alex Mathews, a former CIA officer who has served in Moscow for many years, and the physical, emotional, and psychological toll that Moscow – a city which “has drawn him to her warm bosom” – leaves him with.
I loved the novel’s settings and place, and I found myself rooting for Alex as he struggles to adapt to the ‘Moscow Rules’ and ‘getting off the X.’ At the novel’s conclusion, I realized, like Alex, that the Cold War had never really ended.
'In The Poet's Game, Vidich confirms his place in the pantheon of the new generation of spy novelists. Once again, his elegant, finely developed characters add nuance and depth to a fast-paced story' Financial Times
'Vidich details political gamesmanship with an exactitude in the tradition of John le Carre, whose influence he ably honours' Irish Times
'We all have dreams and then we wake up.'
Alex Matthews thought he had left it all behind. His CIA career, the viper's den of bureaucracy at headquarters and the lies and stress of the cat and mouse game of double agents. But then…
While not a novel, this tale reads like one and is a marvelous account of the training, development, and deployment of the USSR’s and Russia’s greatest illegals, many of whom could easily inhabit the finest spy novels ever written. Walker writes about the early inter-war illegals, as well as the later World War II and Cold War illegals, and their colorful lives and personalities, as well as those of their ruthless masters.
I appreciated Walker’s ability to explore the psychological and hidden costs of such work, and the toll which it takes upon the illegal officers and their families. Like me, lovers of the series The Americans will enjoy this fine book and appreciate the late Yuri Shevchenko’s comment (he was a legendary Russian illegal, for many years overseas): “All of us on this earth get just one life. But not illegals. They can live several lives, all full of adventures.”
ONE OF THE ECONOMIST'S BEST BOOKS OF 2025 • The definitive history of Russia’s most secret spy program, from the earliest days of the Soviet Union to Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, and a revelatory examination of how that hidden history shaped both Russia and the West.
More than a century ago, the new Bolshevik government began sending Soviet citizens abroad as deep-cover spies, training them to pose as foreign aristocrats, merchants, and students. Over time, this grew into the most ambitious espionage program in history. Many intelligence agencies use undercover operatives, but the KGB was the only one to go…
Journey to an unnamed mountainous country in central Europe at the end of the Great War. Enter Citizen Orlov, a simple fishmonger and an honest, upright citizen, who answers a phone call meant for a secret agent and stumbles into a hidden…
I loved Yariv Inbar’s tale, one of the best that I have read in years.
As a Mossad officer and novelist, he brilliantly captures the intricacies and nuances of espionage in a tale involving Irit, a Mossad officer, and her protagonist Noor, the wife of a Syrian WMD expert whom Irit hopes to recruit. I enjoyed how Inbar captured the intimacy of espionage, and the different stages of its life cycle, and how such things often end tragically, with multiple sorrows and traumas.
My other favorite character was Menachem, a former Mossad officer turned psychotherapist, who advises Mossad and Irit along the way, bringing an additional human touch to this singular novel.
What if one impossible decision during a suspenseful mission shattered everything you believed about your past?
Set deep within the world of contemporary Israeli espionage, Behind the Trigger is a psychological spy thriller where covert operations collide with buried trauma, and the cost of trust is life or death.
Irit is no cliché female protagonist. She’s a Mossad field agent, mother, and wife - trained to complete missions, not confront her past. But when a thrilling assignment sparks an unexpected connection with Noor - the wife of a Syrian missiles engineer - everything changes.
This novel begins in Texas, where Father Ishmael has retired, ministering to a small parish after his time overseas. One day, he gets a visit from a distressed mother from Bosnia, whose 5-year-old son has been brutally murdered. The mother persuades Father Ishmael to investigate further.
Father Ishmael reluctantly takes the case, and the trail leads to Sarajevo and Vienna. As the possible identity of the killer becomes apparent, this leads to a different type of denouement, which tests Father Ishmael’s faith and involves diplomatic, religious, and legal complexities. The case leads Father Ishmael to Jerusalem, Istanbul, Rome, Tel Aviv, and Tehran, and is a tale of redemption, healing, and Christian forgiveness, allowing for Father Ishmael and the victim’s mother to achieve closure.
Journey to an unnamed mountainous country in central Europe at the end of the Great War. Enter Citizen Orlov, a simple fishmonger and an honest, upright citizen, who answers a phone call meant for a secret agent and stumbles into a hidden…