Synopses & Reviews
Review
"Little America does for the CIA what The Sopranos does for the mafia brings it home to the family, in a funny, real, and ultimately even more frightening and telling way." Robin Green, Head Writer, Executive Producer, The Sopranos
Review
"An absorbing read that brings a particular time and place vividly to life." Carrie Bissey, Booklist (starred review)
Review
"[A] clever, unlikely take on an espionage thriller....The story has the twists of an espionage thriller wrapped in the rites of a Cheeverish WASP culture of booze, cigarettes and repressed emotion. Bromell...will gratify his fans with this bemused deconstruction of the spy myth." Publishers Weekly
About the Author
Henry Bromell won the Houghton Mifflin Literary Award for his first novel, The Slightest Distance. His collection of short stories, I Know Your Heart, Marco Polo, was published by Knopf. Bromells stories have appeared in many magazines, among them The New Yorker and Rolling Stone, and have been represented in two O. Henry Award collections. Bromell has written and produced numerous television shows, including Northern Exposure and Chicago Hope. He wrote and directed the feature film Panic, starring William H. Macy and Neve Campbell. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and son.