by Alex Carr (Author)
Nicole has experienced enough danger and excitement to last her several lifetimes. But a six-year spell in Marseilles' toughest prison has cured her adrenaline habit. Now peace and quiet are what she craves. A farmhouse buried deep in the French Pyrenees, a garden to tend, and the occasional job whipping up a passport or a visa to pay for her simple lifestyle will do her fine. John Valsamis could have been any tourist, a solitary American needing directions in Nicole's empty corner of the world. But she knows he isn't. From his briefcase Valsamis pulls a Red Notice, a document reserved for people regarded by interpol as serious terrorist threats. On the document is a face familiar to Nicole - Rahim Ali. They had worked together and been lovers a decade earlier in Lisbon. Nicole does not believe Rahim has turned to terrorism, yet Valsamis confronts her with what looks like proof, along with intelligence of a planned major terrorist strike. Rahim was last spotted in Lisbon and Valsamis wants Nicole to track him down. Nicole cannot resist the pull, the need to prove Valsamis wrong about her former lover. Just a few days, she tells herself, a week at most. She'll find him and clear things up and be back to her old routine. But as the train slides south towards Lisbon's Santa Apolonia Station, she begins to realise how foolish her expectations had been ...
Format: Hardcover
Pages: 240
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Orion
Published: 15 Mar 2007
ISBN 10: 075287179X
ISBN 13: 9780752871790
Book Overview: Carr follows in the footsteps of Ludlum and Le Carre, and joins Gayle Lynds in giving male writers of international espionage thrillers a run for their money Writing under the name Jenny Siler, Carr's novels have always received rapturous reviews. Her latest, FLASHBACK, is no exception: 'Intense, inventive and impressive, FLASHBACK sees Jenny Siler go from strength to strength' Val McDermid; 'A terrific read. On present form Siler is showing the competition a clean and perfectly-shaped pair of heels' Literary Review; 'As if a young John le Carre had rewritten THE BOURNE IDENTITY' Publishers Weekly