âA master spy novelist.ââThe Wall Street Journal âPage after page is dazzling.ââJames Patterson NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
Late summer, 1938. Hollywood film star Fredric Stahl is on his way to Paris to make a movie. The Nazis know heâs comingâa secret bureau within the Reich has been waging political warfare against France, and for their purposes, Fredric Stahl is a perfect agent of influence. What they donât know is that Stahl, horrified by the Nazi war on Jews and intellectuals, has become part of an informal spy service run out of the American embassy. Mission to Paris is filled with heart-stopping tension, beautifully drawn scenes of romance, and extraordinarily alive characters: foreign assassins; a glamorous Russian actress-turned-spy; and the women in Stahlâs life. At the center of the novel is the city of Parisâits bistros, hotels grand and anonymous, and the Parisians, living every night as though it were their last. Alan Furst brings to life both a dark time in history and the passion of the human hearts that fought to survive it.
BONUS: This edition includes an excerpt from Alan Furst's Midnight in Europe.
Praise for Mission to Paris
âThe most talented espionage novelist of our generation.ââVince Flynn
âVividly re-creates the excitement and growing gloom of the City of Light in 1938â39 . . . It doesnât get more action-packed and grippingly atmospheric than this.ââThe Boston Globe
âOne of [Furstâs] best . . . This is the romantic Paris to make a tourist weep. . . . In Furstâs densely populated books, hundreds of minor charactersâclerks, chauffeurs, soldiers, whoresâall whirl around his heroes in perfect focus for a page or two, then dot by dot, face by face, they vanish, leaving a heartbreaking sense of the vast Homeric epic that was World War II and the smallness of almost every life that was caught up in it.ââThe New York Times Book Review âA book no reader will put down until the final page . . . Critics compare [Alan] Furst to Graham Greene and John le CarrĂŠ [as] a master of historical espionage.ââLibrary Journal (starred review)
âAlan Furstâs writing reminds me of a swim in perfect water on a perfect day, fluid and exquisite. One wants the feeling to go on forever, the book to never end. . . . Furst is one of the finest spy novelists working today.ââPublishers Weekly
âA master spy novelist.ââThe Wall Street Journal âPage after page is dazzling.ââJames Patterson NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
Late summer, 1938. Hollywood film star Fredric Stahl is on his way to Paris to make a movie. The Nazis know heâs comingâa secret bureau within the Reich has been waging political warfare against France, and for their purposes, Fredric Stahl is a perfect agent of influence. What they donât know is that Stahl, horrified by the Nazi war on Jews and intellectuals, has become part of an informal spy service run out of the American embassy. Mission to Paris is filled with heart-stopping tension, beautifully drawn scenes of romance, and extraordinarily alive characters: foreign assassins; a glamorous Russian actress-turned-spy; and the women in Stahlâs life. At the center of the novel is the city of Parisâits bistros, hotels grand and anonymous, and the Parisians, living every night as though it were their last. Alan Furst brings to life both a dark time in history and the passion of the human hearts that fought to survive it.
BONUS: This edition includes an excerpt from Alan Furst's Midnight in Europe.
Praise for Mission to Paris
âThe most talented espionage novelist of our generation.ââVince Flynn
âVividly re-creates the excitement and growing gloom of the City of Light in 1938â39 . . . It doesnât get more action-packed and grippingly atmospheric than this.ââThe Boston Globe
âOne of [Furstâs] best . . . This is the romantic Paris to make a tourist weep. . . . In Furstâs densely populated books, hundreds of minor charactersâclerks, chauffeurs, soldiers, whoresâall whirl around his heroes in perfect focus for a page or two, then dot by dot, face by face, they vanish, leaving a heartbreaking sense of the vast Homeric epic that was World War II and the smallness of almost every life that was caught up in it.ââThe New York Times Book Review âA book no reader will put down until the final page . . . Critics compare [Alan] Furst to Graham Greene and John le CarrĂŠ [as] a master of historical espionage.ââLibrary Journal (starred review)
âAlan Furstâs writing reminds me of a swim in perfect water on a perfect day, fluid and exquisite. One wants the feeling to go on forever, the book to never end. . . . Furst is one of the finest spy novelists working today.ââPublishers Weekly