
C J Tudor
Articles
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Feb 22, 2024 |
publishersweekly.com | C J Tudor |Douglas Preston |Katrina Carrasco |SJ Rozan
Susan Elia MacNeal. Bantam, $29 (304p) ISBN 978-0-593-15698-8In the gripping swan song for the bestselling Maggie Hope series (following The Hollywood Spy), MacNeal weaves fascinating bits of real-life espionage into her intrepid British spy’s final mission. In January 1944, Maggie receives an assignment from Kim Philby, the head of the Iberian Section of MI6.
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Feb 14, 2024 |
publishersweekly.com | A J Finn |C J Tudor |Douglas Preston |Katrina Carrasco
A.J. Finn. Morrow, $30 (416p) ISBN 978-0-06-267845-4From its gothic opening image of a woman facedown in a koi pond to its stunning cliffside climax, this spellbinder surpasses the high bar set by Finn’s bestselling debut, The Woman in the Window. Readers are immediately plunged into the world of Sebastian Trapp, a reclusive novelist made rich by a long-running detective series and notorious by personal tragedy.
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Feb 13, 2024 |
publishersweekly.com | James B. Comey |C J Tudor |Douglas Preston |Katrina Carrasco
James Comey. Mysterious Press, $30 (352p) ISBN 978-1-61316-524-9Former FBI director Comey follows up Central Park West with an entertaining second whodunit featuring former assistant U.S. attorney Nora Carleton, now employed as general counsel for Saugatuck Associates of Westport, Conn. Saugatuck, the largest hedge fund in the world, is known for its rigid moral principles.
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Feb 6, 2024 |
publishersweekly.com | C J Tudor |Douglas Preston |Katrina Carrasco |SJ Rozan
Keith Bruton. Brash, $18.95 trade paper (234p) ISBN 978-1-954841-76-5Bicycle-riding Dublin assassin Patrick Cullen returns in Bruton’s briskly paced sequel to The Lemon Man. Ordinarily, Patrick’s assignments—contracted through his boss, a woman known only as the Bronze Man—involve murdering criminals or otherwise unsavory characters.
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Feb 1, 2024 |
publishersweekly.com | Douglas Preston |Lincoln Child |C J Tudor |Katrina Carrasco
Bestseller Preston (coauthor of the Agent Pendergast series) spins a creepy and creative variation on Jurassic Park. In the near future, advances in gene editing have led to breakthroughs in de-extinction, bringing prehistoric mammals back to life by rebuilding their genomes and muting genes for aggression.
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