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Their investigation cuts through the glittering façades and lingering scars of a nation still reeling from war—where resentment simmers, political alliances shift, and the first shadows of a new conflict fall across Europe. Amid whispers of blackmail and betrayal, the pair must navigate intrigue and danger to unmask a killer hiding in plain sight.
one of the most engrossing narratives I have had the good fortune to read this year—or rather live through. I found myself immersed completely in this Golden Age mystery, escaping the anxieties of today ...Operation Berlin marks a significant change for this English author, who in the past has given us tense thrillers set in the generally un-thrilling finance industry, and others that feature a Boston-reared homicide detective sent to solve crimes in the place of his birth, Iceland. Wanting to know more about where Ridpath comes from and where his career might be headed in the near future, I recently e-mailed him some queries that he was kind enough to answer.
Vivid characterisation is on full display with the two main protagonists, (Sir) Archie Laverick and Esme Carmichael. Laverick is the heir to Yarmer Hall in Yorkshire’s West Riding—a British aristocrat who survived the horrors of trench warfare in World War One, but returned with both physical and mental scars. His muscular manservant-cum-batman, Arthur Lister, is always by his side, managing his episodic fugues (induced by ‘shell-shock’). Haunted by his war service, which claimed the life of his brother Fred, Archie manages his demons by researching and writing about former historical wartime generals (which he publishes to much acclaim).
Via his cousin Duncan Mandeville, Archie travels to Berlin (with Lister) to research a biography of a Prussian general [Field Marshal Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher] who fought the French forces during the Napoleonic Wars. ...
Archie requires an [English- and] German-speaking assistant to help him research the Prussian general. This secretarial support comes in the form of Esme Carmichael, a young American woman ... aspiring to become a foreign correspondent for a Chicago newspaper. What better place than the hotbed of political and social intrigue [that is] 1930s Berlin for an aspiring young journalist from Montana?
passion for books to me. I realized that I was just trying to write books that my mother would like to read!
auctions in the UK, the U.S., and Germany for the book. When Free to Trade was published in 1995, it got to No. 2 on the UK bestseller lists and was translated into 35 languages.
found out about book collectors, the more this initial impression has been reinforced.
service officer’s wife four decades before. Now, in your mid-60s, you have begun this Foreign Correspondent series. Would it be fair to say you’ve come full circle, as far as your time-period interests are concerned?
a novella sequel, Operation Lost Hours, available to download for free here. And next year will bring us the sophomore Foreign Correspondent novel, Operation Vienna. Can you tell us a little about how you see this series shaping up in the future?
• April 1 marked the 28th anniversary of Kevin Burton Smith launching that essential online crime-fiction resource, The Thrilling Detective Web Site. His page went live on that date back in 1998! Congratulations to my old friend Kevin for sticking with this project for so long and growing it so expertly.
Channel 5 thrillers are usually one-season wonders, “self-contained nuggets of deliciously daft drama” (e.g., The Au Pair and The Rumour). But The Game, which had its UK airing in 2025 and found Jason Watkins (McDonald & Dodds) playing Huw Miller, a recently retired police detective who becomes convinced that his suave new neighbor, Patrick Harbottle (Grantchester’s Robson Green), is the repeat killer he’s long pursued, “left viewers wanting more,” says TVGuide.co.uk. At the close of Series 1, Patrick was being arrested and Huw was seriously injured. The follow-up is set a year on. It sees Huw having survived and thinking himself free of the psychological grip Patrick held him in. “Retreating with his wife, Alice (Sunetra Sarker), to an isolated house by the sea,” The Killing Times explains, “Huw is determined to rebuild a quiet life, far from the violence that nearly destroyed them. But peace, he soon realises, is an illusion.” Channel 5 says The Game will return in 2027.Set against the sweeping Northumberland coastline and its surrounding market towns, the series centres on an unlikely crime-solving duo.• Something I should have mentioned long ago: HBO-TV has ordered an eight-episode drama based on Adrian McKinty’s best-selling 2019 child-abduction novel, The Chain. Behind this project is Damon Lindelof, who previously gave us Lost and The Leftovers, and was once a writer on Nash Bridges and Crossing Jordan. As The Wrap recalls, Irish author McKinty’s chilling tale “follows Rachel, a divorcée who is undergoing treatment for cancer, who gets a call that her daughter, Kylie, has been kidnapped and is now part of The Chain. To get Kylie back, she must kidnap another child after paying a ransom. Kylie will be released when the parents of the child Rachel has kidnapped take yet another child and continue the chain.” The Wrap notes, however, that “Lindelof is said to be expanding the mythology of McKinty’s award-winning thriller.”
Green will star as Joe Ruby, a jack-of-all-trades whose life has been shaped by mistakes, regrets and missed opportunities, alongside Oxford-educated DI Rose O’Connell (casting to be announced), a rarefied intellectual, a deep thinker with a brilliant mind and an ice-cool disposition. In a classic odd-couple pairing, Joe and Rose combine their talents as they frustrate, confound, and ultimately surprise one another while unravelling a series of compelling crime mysteries.
Beginning with the murder of an agent in Saudi Arabia by a weapon never before seen by the Secret Service and spanning the globe in an epic race against time to avert global catastrophe, the novel brings the literary Bond squarely into the twenty-first century, where the old world that made him is crumbling and a terrifying new order emerges while a dangerous villain—the most distinctive since Goldfinger –moves in the shadows. Higson explores themes of power, technology, and international tensions over resources in an extraordinarily timely story.UK publisher Michael Joseph has promised to deliver King Zero to bookshops on the other side of the pond by September 24.

cyberattack; Alison Gaylin’s Booked, her latest lively yarn featuring Sunny Randall, Robert B. Parker’s other Boston private invetigator; and Michael Crichton’s never-before-published Tinseltown thriller, Murder in Hollywood.
• Everything on Black, by F.T. Grant (Vigilante Crime & Pulp)
• The Pie & Mash Detective Agency, by J. D. Brinkworth (Berkley)
• The Chambermaid’s Key, by Genevieve Graham (Simon & Schuster)
• The Patriot’s Daughter, by Brittany Butler (Crooked Lane)
• Hawai’i Rage, by Tori Eldridge
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