



Yesterday's Spy
A Novel
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4.4 • 13 Ratings
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
A father searches for his missing son in 1953 Tehran in this brilliantly plotted espionage thriller from the bestselling author of Triple Cross.
London, 1953. Harry Towers is a recently retired, and even more recently widowed, British intelligence officer. But he springs to action when hears that his estranged son Sean has disappeared in Tehran after writing a damning article about the involvement of government officials in the opium trade.
In Tehran, a city on the brink of a historic coup, Harry’s career as a spy soon proves perfect training for this much more personal mission as American, British, Iranian, and French players flit in and out of the scene. But as the first attempt at a coup in the city fails and foreign powers jockey for oil, money, and influence, Sean’s disappearance takes on a more sinister tone. Was he really taken in retribution for his reporting, or is this an attempt to silence a globally significant revelation he was preparing to make?
Or, most terrifying of all, does Sean’s disappearance have nothing to do with him at all? Has Harry’s past caught up to them all?
Praise for Tom Bradby
“[A] cracking, uber-topical spy thriller . . . a plot full of twists and turns.” —Financial Times
“Enthralling and fast-moving . . . packed with details of modern tradecraft in the twilight world of spooks, against a background of politics at its most Machiavellian, it is the stuff headlines are made of.” —Daily Mail
“Bradby masterfully combines textured psychological drama with a rip-roaring plot that boasts several dizzying switchbacks along the way to a genuinely shocking conclusion.” —Booklist (starred review)
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The disappearance of journalist Sean Tower in Tehran, Iran, drives this intelligent spy thriller from Bradby (the Kate Henderson series) set in 1953. Sean's father, recently retired British spy Harry Towers, flies from London to the Iranian capital to find him just as the coup to depose Iran's nationalist leader, Mohammed Mossadegh, and install the Shah, Reza Pahlavi, gets underway. Aided by Sean's girlfriend, Shahnaz, Harry looks to local contacts, government officials, and ex-pats mostly spies from the United States, Britain, and France for answers. Was Sean targeted because of his left-wing politics? Has he been recruited by the Soviets? Or is his disappearance retribution for something Harry did as an undercover agent with Britain's Secret Intelligence Service? On occasion, particularly toward the end, politics and flashbacks to Harry's personal and professional life slow the momentum, but they are always relevant to the story. Bradby smoothly mixes geopolitical intrigue, old-fashioned sleuthing, and cinematic action. Fans of smart, historical espionage will be rewarded.