Red Sparrow Trilogy eBook Boxed Set
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- $44.99
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- $44.99
Publisher Description
Red Sparrow is now a major motion picture starring Jennifer Lawrence and Joel Edgerton!
Now available in a single collection, the complete electrifying New York Times bestselling trilogy—Red Sparrow, Palace of Treason, and The Kremlin’s Candidate—“a primer in twenty-first-century spying...terrifically good” (The New York Times Book Review) from veteran CIA officer Jason Matthews.
In present-day Russia, ruled by President Vladimir Putin, Russian intelligence officer Dominika Egorov struggles to survive in the post-Soviet intelligence jungle. Forced to become a “Sparrow”—a spy trained in the art of seduction to elicit information from unsuspecting marks—she’s been assigned to Nathaniel Nash, a CIA officer who handles the organization’s most sensitive Russian intelligence.
The action in The Red Sparrow Trilogy careens between Russia, France, Hong Kong, Turkey, Greece, Italy, and the United States as these two young intelligence officers, trained in their respective spy schools, collide in a charged atmosphere of deception and a forbidden spiral of carnal attraction that threatens both their careers and consumes intelligence agencies from Moscow to the highest offices in the US government. In each book they confront not only the shadows and intrigues of the Russian and American intelligence networks but highly trained, cold-blooded killers assigned to destroy them.
With a plot ripped from tomorrow’s headlines, and written with sophisticated brio, The Red Sparrow Trilogy has been hailed as a monumental accomplishment “as suspenseful and cinematic as the best spy movies” (The Philadelphia Inquirer); “fans of the genre’s masters including John le Carré and Ian Fleming will happily embrace Matthews’s central spy” (USA TODAY). Collected together, the three novels form a stunning masterwork of suspense, intrigue, sex, and violence.
Customer Reviews
Red sparrow trilogy
Absolutely first rate
Bought the trilogy because of “review “ in NMH news
Anything similar available?
Peter Welsh ‘59
Got everything wrong
The author is way off about everything Russian that he is not even wrong. He makes really stupid mistakes about Russian language and culture, as well as other languages and cultures. He either have not attempted to do any research or is really bad at it. Every now and then he uses Russian terms, but so badly— google translate would have done a better job. I can’t even understand how he could make such ignorant mistakes about so many things. Garbage. Reading this book made me dumber and poorer.