Here are 100 books that The Tourist fans have personally recommended if you like The Tourist. Book DNA is a community of 12,000+ authors and super readers sharing their favorite books with the world.

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Book cover of Agents of Innocence

Ursula Wong Author Of Strategic Deception

From my list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks.

Why am I passionate about this?

For the record, I’m not a spy. I’m a Lithuanian-American writer who had a dickens of a time validating WWII-era family papers about the Soviet occupation of Lithuania. I don’t speak Lithuanian, so I relied on English-language sources where Lithuania was sometimes little more than a footnote. As I learned more about the Soviet occupation and life after independence, I became convinced that it’s almost impossible to talk about Lithuania without considering the geopolitical tension that comes with having Russia as a neighbor. This grew into a love of spycraft, political strategy, history, international tensions, Lithuania, Eastern Europe, Russia… and pierogis.

Ursula's book list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks

Ursula Wong Why Ursula loves this book

This book is set in Lebanon during the 1970s when tradition, an etiquette of secrets, and shifting alliances were the norm.

The story is compelling because it captures the Middle East before it was transformed by decades of conflict and political turmoil. CIA officer Tom Rodgers is a better Bond, relying on wit and intelligence instead of gadgetry. He’s a spy’s spy in a novel rich with intrigue, tradecraft, and human insight.

I hope you love it as much as I do.

By David Ignatius ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked Agents of Innocence as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Agents of Innocence is the book that established David Ignatius's reputation as a master of the novel of contemporary espionage. Into the treacherous world of shifting alliances and arcane subterfuge comes idealistic CIA man Tom Rogers. Posted in Beirut to penetrate the PLO and recruit a high-level operative, he soon learns the heavy price of innocence in a time and place that has no use for it.


If you love The Tourist...

Book cover of The Rosewood Penny

The Rosewood Penny by J.S. Fields,

2023 Queer Indie Award Nominee!

The dragons of Yuro have been hunted to extinction.

On a small, isolated island, in a reclusive forest, lives bandit leader Marani and her brother Jacks. With their outlaw band they rob from the rich to feed themselves, raiding carriages and dodging the occasional vindictive…

Book cover of The Seventh Floor

Ursula Wong Author Of Strategic Deception

From my list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks.

Why am I passionate about this?

For the record, I’m not a spy. I’m a Lithuanian-American writer who had a dickens of a time validating WWII-era family papers about the Soviet occupation of Lithuania. I don’t speak Lithuanian, so I relied on English-language sources where Lithuania was sometimes little more than a footnote. As I learned more about the Soviet occupation and life after independence, I became convinced that it’s almost impossible to talk about Lithuania without considering the geopolitical tension that comes with having Russia as a neighbor. This grew into a love of spycraft, political strategy, history, international tensions, Lithuania, Eastern Europe, Russia… and pierogis.

Ursula's book list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks

Ursula Wong Why Ursula loves this book

What do you get when you combine a disgruntled employee, alligators, organizational politics, and espionage? A compelling look into the culture of the CIA.

Strong characters lead this hunt for a mole within the CIA. Two of the most interesting are women who are radically different from each other. One is rooted organizational politics. The other is determined to save the organization by finding a mole and righting a wrong.

It’s both entertaining and insightful. McCloskey takes a strategic and intellectual approach to the story, which is, for me, refreshing.

By David McCloskey ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked The Seventh Floor as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A Russian arrives in Singapore with a secret to sell. When the Russian is killed and Sam Joseph, the CIA officer dispatched for the meet, goes missing, operational chief Artemis Procter is made a scapegoat for the disaster and run out of the service. Months later, Sam appears at Procter's doorstep with an explosive secret: there is a Russian mole burrowed deep within the highest ranks of the CIA.

As Procter and Sam investigate, they arrive at a shortlist of suspects made up of both Procter's closest friends and fiercest enemies. The hunt requires Procter to dredge up her checkered…


Book cover of The Expat

Ursula Wong Author Of Strategic Deception

From my list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks.

Why am I passionate about this?

For the record, I’m not a spy. I’m a Lithuanian-American writer who had a dickens of a time validating WWII-era family papers about the Soviet occupation of Lithuania. I don’t speak Lithuanian, so I relied on English-language sources where Lithuania was sometimes little more than a footnote. As I learned more about the Soviet occupation and life after independence, I became convinced that it’s almost impossible to talk about Lithuania without considering the geopolitical tension that comes with having Russia as a neighbor. This grew into a love of spycraft, political strategy, history, international tensions, Lithuania, Eastern Europe, Russia… and pierogis.

Ursula's book list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks

Ursula Wong Why Ursula loves this book

Geeks are my kind of people. Add exotic locations, a sexy Chinese operative, and industrial espionage for the simmering foundation of The Expat.

Michael Wang is an ambitious engineer enticed to Beijing by the promise of success. Once there, he gradually learns he’s being manipulated, and that’s just the start of it. He becomes a pawn in a swirling game of espionage-chess.

The surprise ending made it one of my favorite and most memorable spy reads. 

By Hansen Shi ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Expat as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A New York Times Best Thriller of the Year

A Macavity Award Finalist for Best First Mystery

A fresh and vivid new voice brings a contemporary edge to the classic espionage novel.

At twenty-six, Princeton grad Michael Wang is trapped. Stifled under the bamboo ceiling at General Motors, he’s working quietly on a breakthrough in self-driving car technology that he hopes will catapult him out of obscurity. Disaffected and largely friendless in San Francisco, he’s dogged by resentment towards the Ivy Leaguers who never accepted him and his colleagues at GM who see him as passive and faceless.

But all…


If you love Olen Steinhauer...

Book cover of Transforming Pandora

Transforming Pandora by Carolyn Mathews,

Transforming Pandora, women's fiction with a metaphysical undercurrent, is written with humour and a light touch. As the plot slips between two time frames, separated by more than thirty years, the reader explores her life and loves: her ups and downs.

In the opening chapter, Pandora is attempting to…

Book cover of The Director

Ursula Wong Author Of Strategic Deception

From my list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks.

Why am I passionate about this?

For the record, I’m not a spy. I’m a Lithuanian-American writer who had a dickens of a time validating WWII-era family papers about the Soviet occupation of Lithuania. I don’t speak Lithuanian, so I relied on English-language sources where Lithuania was sometimes little more than a footnote. As I learned more about the Soviet occupation and life after independence, I became convinced that it’s almost impossible to talk about Lithuania without considering the geopolitical tension that comes with having Russia as a neighbor. This grew into a love of spycraft, political strategy, history, international tensions, Lithuania, Eastern Europe, Russia… and pierogis.

Ursula's book list on thrillers that favor espionage and tradecraft over fireworks

Ursula Wong Why Ursula loves this book

I’ve always been interested in the impact of technology on espionage - not from a gadgetry perspective, but from a security and informational context.

In The Director, a young punk exposes a flaw in a CIA computer network and offers a list of agents to prove it. This leads to an intense search for a mole within the agency. Disinformation is a compelling plot driver and feels relevant to today’s world of AI-driven manipulation.

By David Ignatius ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Director as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Graham Weber has been the director of the CIA for less than a week when a Swiss kid in a dirty T-shirt walks into the American consulate in Hamburg and says the agency has been hacked, and he has a list of agents' names to prove it. This is the moment a CIA director most dreads. Like the new world of cyber-espionage from which it's drawn, The Director is a maze of double dealing, about a world where everything is written in zeroes and ones-and nothing can be trusted.


Book cover of The Tears of Autumn

Michael J Goodspeed Author Of Dead Spy, Cold Grave

From my list on spy novels from someone who has been addicted to them since childhood.

Why am I passionate about this?

I’m a Canadian novelist and historian who became addicted to spy novels in my early teens. I first read John Buchan’s The Thirty-Nine Steps and Greenmantle when I should have been studying for my Grade 10 Math exams. Since then, I’ve read everything in the genre that I could get my hands on. As an army officer, I’ve always had a strong interest in security matters. On top of this, military service gave me opportunities for travel as well as meeting and working closely with a diverse range of people, all of which have stoked my interest in the world’s second-oldest profession.

Michael's book list on spy novels from someone who has been addicted to them since childhood

Michael J Goodspeed Why Michael loves this book

McCarry has never had the wide acclaim that my first two picks have had, and that’s a shame.

The Tears of Autumn is set in late 1963. Kennedy has been assassinated, and Vietnam has come to a fast boil. McCarry’s protagonist, Paul Christopher, an introspective poet and burned-out spy, takes it upon himself to find out the truth behind the rumor that the Vietnamese were behind Kennedy’s killing.

It’s a novel that spans continents and provides professional insight into the motivation and temperament of the spy world. Like Le Carré, McCarry’s style is sparse, lean, and enthralling. In a world beset by conspiracy theories, disinformation, and fake news, The Tears of Autumn is superb.

By Charles McCarry ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked The Tears of Autumn as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A re-release of the best-selling thriller originally published twenty years ago finds influential secret agent Paul Christopher pursuing a dangerous theory about the assassination of JFK, an investigation that threatens American foreign policy. By the author of Old Boys. 20,000 first printing.


Book cover of Muir's Gambit: A Spy Game Novel

James Stejskal Author Of A Question of Time

From my list on spies by Americans who really know the score.

Why am I passionate about this?

I'm a military historian and an author. To get inspiration for my writing, I spent 35 years in Special Forces (as a "Green Beret") and as a CIA officer in strange places working with interesting people. I first wrote non-fiction but I needed US Government approval for everything. So, following the saying “Fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth,” I tell my tales as “faction”—stories reflecting a reality most people don’t know or understand. I write about “Us Versus Them”—stories about teamwork—and the result is The Snake Eater Chronicles. I leave it to the reader to decide where fact ends and fiction begins.

James' book list on spies by Americans who really know the score

James Stejskal Why James loves this book

Muir’s Gambit is a prequel to Beckner’s blockbuster movie Spy Game (with Brad Pitt and Robert Redford). 

Not your traditional “spy thriller,” it follows a dark thematic arc of two spies, fueled by whisky and cigarettes, talking on the front porch of a beach house after the assassination of a comrade.

It is layered with a gritty (and sometimes absurdist) intellectual/philosophical study of the moral cost of living a life of lies. All in search of a truth that is hidden from everyone but one man.

Told with flashbacks to events in Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, and Hong Kong, it is a story fraught with human emotion—love, heartbreak, grief, regret—and the fragility of memory. A story told with authentic tradecraft and serpentine strategy, it evokes—more than any other book I’ve read—the reality, challenges, and moral pitfalls of working in a clandestine intelligence organization.

Muirs Gambit is the 1st…

By Michael Frost Beckner ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked Muir's Gambit as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.


If you love The Tourist...

Book cover of Domesticated Magic

Domesticated Magic by Wendy Palmer,

Mateo Taurasi and his family fled their island home when their people turned to sorcery. Mateo’s own magic is tame but it’s still banned in the Vaeringan Empire...and his family still use it every day in their cosy teahouse. The last thing they need is an Imperial barging in to…

Book cover of The Company: A Novel of the CIA

Luca Trenta Author Of The President's Kill List: Assassination and Us Foreign Policy Since 1945

From my list on the CIA real stories and histories.

Why am I passionate about this?

Green tracers in the sky over Baghdad. My first political memory is the start of the Gulf War in 1991. I remember writing angry essays criticizing the US decision to invade Iraq in 2003 for my high-school assignments. I have always been interested in US foreign policy and in how presidents make decisions. During my PhD, as I was working on a chapter on the origins of the Cuban Missile Crisis, I discovered the extent and–frankly–the madness of some of the plots the CIA and the White House concocted against Fidel Castro. More recently, the US government’s use of assassination and “targeted killings” have become the focus of my research. 

Luca's book list on the CIA real stories and histories

Luca Trenta Why Luca loves this book

The book's subheading reads A Novel of the CIA. I would go further. This is ‘The Novel of the CIA,’ especially of the CIA between its founding and the early 1990s. It is a masterful combination of real and fictitious spies and covert operations.

The portrayal is so precise, the blending so seamless, that I found myself–and yes, I am supposedly an expert on this–double-checking whether certain operations had taken place. Nonfiction books on the CIA are one of my favorite things, but here, you experience the characters from much closer. I felt their desperation when operations collapsed, or agents were betrayed, or their elation after the rarer successes.

I felt the smoke in James Angleton’s room as he hunted for the missing mole; whether he managed to capture the mole or not will be for you to discover, but the book will stay with you both literally (it’s…

By Robert Littell ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked The Company as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The New York Times bestselling spy novel The Company lays bare the history and inner workings of the CIA. This critically acclaimed blockbuster from internationally renowned novelist Robert Littell seamlessly weaves together history and fiction to create a multigenerational, wickedly nostalgic saga of the CIA-known as "the Company" to insiders. Racing across a landscape spanning the legendary Berlin Base of the '50s, the Soviet invasion of Hungary, the Bay of Pigs, Afghanistan, and the Gorbachev putsch, The Company tells the thrilling story of agents imprisoned in double lives, fighting an amoral, elusive, formidable enemy-and each other-in an internecine battle within…


Book cover of Cold Warrior: James Jesus Angleton - The CIA's Master Spy Hunter

Hugh Wilford Author Of The CIA: An Imperial History

From my list on history about the CIA.

Why am I passionate about this?

I'm a British-born American historian, currently residing in Long Beach, California. I’ve published four books on the CIA and lectured about it for the Great Courses. Why spies? I’ve always loved spy novels and movies but my historical interest was piqued years ago when I stumbled across the weird story of how the CIA secretly funded various American artists and writers in the so-called Cultural Cold War. Decades on, I’m still fascinated by the subject: there’s so much human drama involved, and it’s a great lens through which to examine recent American and world history.

Hugh's book list on history about the CIA

Hugh Wilford Why Hugh loves this book

The history of the CIA features many fascinating personalities and there are several excellent spy biographies, Thomas Powers on Richard Helms, for example, or Randall Woods on William Colby. But the most complex and compelling of all figures in the Agency’s past must surely be the legendary head of counterintelligence, James Angleton. Again, there are numerous works on Angleton and his obsessive hunt for a top-level Soviet agent in the CIA, but I enjoyed and benefited most from Tom Mangold’s Cold Warrior, an astonishingly detailed and penetrating portrayal of America’s real-life George Smiley.

By Tom Mangold ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked Cold Warrior as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A biography of the spymaster who ran the CIA's counterintelligence operation for twenty years until his downfall


Book cover of For Your Ears Only

Robin King Author Of Remembrandt

From my list on spy books for Ally Carter fans.

Why am I passionate about this?

When I realized I didn’t have what it takes to join the CIA, I made it my life mission to find out everything it takes to be a spy—which, of course, made it necessary to watch every show and read every espionage story ever told. In the process, I discovered a passion for uncovering truth, as well as a love of writing. After writing three young adult spy novels, I feel like I’ve found the linguist, code breaker, and crime fighter in myself. My work for LitJoy Crate has given me the ability to know a good story when I read it, and then recommend that book to book lovers everywhere.

Robin's book list on spy books for Ally Carter fans

Robin King Why Robin loves this book

I fell in love with the main character, Loveday (no pun intended), in the first few pages. She’s strong and tough, like all spies should be, and sarcastic—which is so fun to read.

I love her motivation as a spy, but she does have one flaw: she's in love with another member of the team and has been keeping him off missions to keep him safe. This makes me like her even more because she wants to protect him. Overall, the action, explosions, love story between Loveday and Vale, and the spy world had me reading until the very end.

I can’t wait to jump into the next book in the series.

By Emily Kazmierski ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked For Your Ears Only as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A spy caught between her duty, and her heart.

Known only to the CIA and her handler father, Loveday aspires to be the greatest teenage spy who ever lived. In a hidden bunker under a swanky hotel, she and her team train and execute missions without being noticed by the outside world.

When Loveday and her team are recruited for their first international mission, it's their big chance to prove their worth to the CIA. But when her comms specialist boyfriend, Vale lobbies for a shot at field work, Loveday is caught between duty and forbidden passion. She knows putting…


If you love Olen Steinhauer...

Book cover of Quick Bright Things

Quick Bright Things by Michael Golding,

This delightful fable about the Golden Age of Broadway unfolds the warm story of Artie, a young rehearsal pianist, Joe, a visionary director, and Carrie, his crackerjack Girl Friday, as they shepherd a production of a musical version of A Midsummer Night's Dream towards opening night. 

Drawn from the personal…

Book cover of A Question of Standing: The History of the CIA

Yakov Ben-Haim Author Of The Dilemmas of Wonderland: Decisions in the Age of Innovation

From my list on making decisions when you don’t know what’s going on.

Why am I passionate about this?

I am a retired university professor. My research, in which I am still actively engaged, deals with decision-making under deep uncertainty: how to make a decision, or design a project, or plan an operation when major relevant factors are unknown or highly uncertain. I developed a decision theory called info-gap theory that grapples with this challenge, and is applied around the world in many fields, including engineering design, economics, medicine, national security, biological conservation, and more.

Yakov's book list on making decisions when you don’t know what’s going on

Yakov Ben-Haim Why Yakov loves this book

This is an interesting collection of essays on the history of the CIA.

A spy agency thrives on deceit and uncertainty, making plans and taking actions when the adversary also thrives on those same elements.

Arranged in chronological order, the essays cover nearly 20 different incidents, describing the challenges, uncertainties, goals, and decisions made by both high-level political decision-makers and practitioners in the field.

Topics covered include early stages in the development of the CIA (founded in 1947), including covert action against the Soviet Union in the 1950s, the Bay of Pigs (1961), the Iran-Contra affair (mid-1980s), up to more recent events with bin Laden, fake news, and more.

By Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones ,

Why should I read it?

2 authors picked A Question of Standing as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

A Question of Standing deals with recognizable events that have shaped the history of the first 75 years of the CIA. Unsparing in its accounts of dirty tricks and their consequences, it values the agency's intelligence and analysis work to offer balanced judgements that avoid both celebration and condemnation of the CIA.

The mission of the CIA, derived from U-1 in World War I more than from World War II's OSS, has always been intelligence. Seventy-five years ago, in the year of its creation, the National Security Act gave the agency, uniquely in world history up to that point, a…


Book cover of Agents of Innocence
Book cover of The Seventh Floor
Book cover of The Expat

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