Ever since the days of Agatha Christie, the great divide in the British detective story has been between plot and characterThe novels of Jim Kelly are. . . a find. The New York Times Book Review Rookie detective Peter Shaw teams up with his fathers tough expartner to investigate both a gruesome seri
Death Toll
โ Scribed by Russ Linton
- Book ID
- 112140201
- Year
- 2023
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 201 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ASIN
- B0CNX357S7
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Former special agent Kade Black knows his adversaries well. He's shadowed terrorists, spies, and mafia bosses.
But he's never had to confront all three at once.
Kade's latest clue has him watching a new dead drop serviced by the late GRU operative, Sergei. But this drop is inactive. No sign of use.
Another intelligence agency has arrived in Sergei's wake. Far from a clandestine operation, agents of the PRC are moving around in the open. Forcing their way into small town politics and flirting with criminal enterprise. But to what end?
The answers will expose a very different gap along the banks of the Delaware River. An intelligence gap. One that puts global security at risk.
With the identity of a key conspirator in Sergei's operation close at hand, Kade will need to root out the bad actors, dead or alive. For that, he'll need the help of friends and foes alike.
But has this shadowy cabal already exacted their deadly toll?..M.F
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
*DEATH TOLLS* (Ace paperback, September 1987). An ex-reporter on a partly terraformed Mars tries to find out if his brother was murdered, and wonders why TV reporter Janet Vincent regularly reaches disaster sites faster than all the competition. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in action: the me
*DEATH TOLLS* (Ace paperback, September 1987). An ex-reporter on a partly terraformed Mars tries to find out if his brother was murdered, and wonders why TV reporter Janet Vincent regularly reaches disaster sites faster than all the competition. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle in action: the me