Synopses & Reviews
#1 New York Times bestselling author Frederick Forsyth delivers a frighteningly possible novel of international terrorism and impending war… As the Russian people face starvation, the Politburo is faced with a hard choice: negotiate with America for food, go to war for national survival, or deal with an uprising in the motherland. Through an informant, British Agent Adam Munro learns that the situation is growing dangerously tense, with powerful forces in the USSR maneuvering for supremacy.
But even as East and West conduct delicate talks, events spiral out of control and threaten to undo every step taken. The world’s largest oil tanker is hijacked by terrorists, and a Ukrainian “freedom fighter” is rescued in a bloody catastrophe on the Black Sea.
From Moscow to Washington, the stakes grow ever more perilous as the mad actions of a few threaten to engulf the entire world in nuclear war—unless Munro can stop them.
Review
“When it comes to espionage, international intrigue, and suspense, Frederick Forsyth is a master.”—
The Washington Post Book World “Forsyth is truly the world’s reigning master of suspense” —Los Angeles Times
“A many-layered thriller…and Mr. Forsyth wraps it all up with a double-whammy ending that will take even the most wary reader by surprise.” —The New York Times Book Review
“An enormous plot that builds unfalteringly, a staggeringly well-detailed international thriller that shows him in blazing top form.”—Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis
Whichever option I choose, men are going to die.
This is the Devil's Alternative, the appalling choice facing the president of the USA and other statesmen throughout the world.
This brilliant storyteller has contrived the most exciting climax. The last minute surprises will take your breath away.
About the Author
Frederick Forsyth is the author of fifteen novels and short story collections. A former Air Force pilot, and print and television reporter for the BBC, he has had four movies and two television miniseries made from his works.
The Day of the Jackal won the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel in 1972.