When Helen Barclay becomes the first female US president, the whole world takes notice. And unfortunately for President Barclay, one man takes very particular notice. He knows her darkest secret, buried for over twenty years. And not only does he have the power to destroy everything she's worked for
Death in Oslo
โ Scribed by Holt, Anne
- Book ID
- 107105756
- Publisher
- Atlantic Books Ltd
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 229 KB
- Series
- Johanne Vik 3
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
When Helen Barclay becomes the first female US president, the whole world takes notice. And unfortunately for President Barclay, one man takes very particular notice. He knows her darkest secret, buried for over twenty years. And not only does he have the power to destroy everything she's worked for, but he also has the ultimate motive. Revenge. Unfortunately for the FBI and the Norwegian police, nobody knows about this when Helen Barclay chooses to visit Norway for her first state visit. But when she goes missing from a locked, heavily secured bedroom, they are forced - unwillingly - to work together to find her. Has she been kidnapped? Murdered? Can the US president really just disappear into thin air...?
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
When Helen Barclay becomes the first female US president, the whole world takes notice. And unfortunately for President Barclay, one man takes very particular notice. He knows her darkest secret, buried for over twenty years. And not only does he have the power to destroy everything she's worked for
When Helen Barclay becomes the first female US president, the whole world takes notice. And unfortunately for President Barclay, one man takes very particular notice. He knows her darkest secret, buried for over twenty years. And not only does he have the power to destroy everything she's worked for
**Winner of the 2017 Tony Award for Best Play** **** **Winner of the 2017 Lucille Lortel Award for Outstanding Play** **Winner of the 2017 New York Drama Critics Circle Award for Best Play** "_Oslo_ is a wonderful and moving work that portrays how real diplomacy works. The play shows us what can