by Alan Furst (Author)
November, 1940. I.A. Serebin, a writer from Odessa and former decorated Hero of the Soviet Union, is on his way to Istanbul following a cryptic letter from a former lover. Ostensibly there on official business for the International Russian Union, an emigre organisation based in Paris, he is drawn into a clandestine world of international spies and political players. With war in Europe drawing nearer, Serebin is recruited by the British secret services - his mission to stop the export of Roumanian oil to Germany. In a race against time, Serebin's journey will take him from the glittering salons of Paris to the back alleys of Bucharest and the Black Sea ports, in a covert operation to staunch the flow of oil, the precious 'blood of victory'.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
Publisher: Phoenix
Published: 28 Aug 2003
ISBN 10: 0753816970
ISBN 13: 9780753816974
Book Overview: 'Nothing can be like watching Casablanca for the first time, but Furst comes closer than anyone has in years' TIME 'It took 14 years and seven novels for Alan Furst to become an overnight sensation. The enthusiasm for the new one was so high [in the US] that Random House went back for a second printing even before pub date' Publishers Weekly Blood of Victory reached number 11 on New York Times bestseller list His last book, Kingdom of Shadows sold over 20,000 copies Alan Furst is internationally recognised as a thriller writer of first-class calibre and the reviews for Blood of Victory have been outstanding: 'Prime quality. Fiction to engage the heart and mind' Literary Review 'For connoisseurs of wartime thrillers, a new novel by Alan Furst has become a major publishing event. The writer has set standards that none of his feted contemporaries can match' Sunday Telegraph 'Leaves you wanting more' Mark Lawson, Guardian 'Furst's work seems to get better and better. Serebin's life is depicted with a winning combination of the sophistication of Robert Harris or Sebastian Faulks with the undisguised boyish envy of Ian Fleming' John Dugdale, Sunday Times