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The Nearest Exit: A Novel (Milo Weaver #2)

The Nearest Exit: A Novel (Milo Weaver #2)

Current price: $9.99
Publication Date: February 26th, 2013
Publisher:
St. Martin's Paperbacks
ISBN:
9781250025425
Pages:
592

Milo Weaver is an undercover spy for the CIA, and he doesn't know who to trust, even within his own organization. His job requires blind obedience, but a burgeoning sense of empathy has compromised his callousness, and when he is instructed to kill a young girl, he balks, grappling with his own moral identity. A terrific story of suspense and action, with powerful writing and unforgettable characters.

Jennie Turner-Collins, Joseph-Beth Booksellers, Cincinnati, OH
June 2010 Indie Next List

Description

From the author of New York Times bestseller The Tourist...

Faced with the potential dissolution of his marriage and the end of his quiet, settled life, reluctant spy Milo Weaver has no choice but to return to his old job as a "tourist" for the CIA. But before he can get back to the dirty work of espionage, he has to prove his worth to his new bosses. Armed with a stack of false identities, Milo heads back to Europe, and for nearly three months every assignment is executed perfectly. Then he's instructed to kill the fifteen-year-old daughter of Moldovan immigrants, and make the body disappear. No questions. For Milo, it's an impossible task, but ignoring his handlers is equally untenable. Suddenly he's in a dangerous position, caught between right and wrong, between powerful self-interested foes, between patriots and traitors—especially now that he has nothing left to lose…

This edition of the book is the deluxe, tall rack mass market paperback.

About the Author

Olen Steinhauer is the New York Times bestselling author of the Milo Weaver novels, including The Tourist and An American Spy. He is also a Dashiell Hammett Award winner, a two-time Edgar Award finalist, and has been nominated for the Anthony, Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, Ellis Peters Historical Dagger, Macavity, and Barry awards. He is also the creator of the Epix TV series Berlin Station. He was raised in Virginia, and now divides his time between New York and Budapest.

Praise for The Nearest Exit: A Novel (Milo Weaver #2)

“Milo's back, and he's better than ever…The Nearest Exit should take its place among the best of the spy thrillers.” —Associated Press

The Nearest Exit, a terrific second installment in Olen Steinhauer's ‘Tourist' spy series about Milo Weaver . . . [His] company is at least as valuable to the series' appeal as is his flair for international trickery.” —Janet Maslin, The New York Times

“[Steinhauer's] descriptions of European cities and their residents are full of life. But Weaver is the novel's gem. . . . In many ways, this is a classic spy novel, but it's Weaver's angst that lifts the book to a compelling level of freshness.” —USA Today

“Steinhauer delivers another winner in The Nearest Exit, a spy novel that asks deeper questions about the price we extract from individuals in the pursuit of the so-called greater good.” —Los Angeles Times

The Nearest Exit, Steinhauer's follow-up novel, reprises the themes of The Tourist with even more success. . . . Like le Carré's George Smiley, Weaver is a richly imagined creation with a scarred psyche and a complex backstory that elevates him above the status of run-of-the-mill world-weary spook.” —The New York Times Book Review

“The author's brilliantly imagined characters…truly sustain this richly rewarding thriller.” —The Houston Chronicle

“Steinhauer's execution… is nearly impeccable, and if your taste goes this dark you will follow him wherever he goes.” —The Dallas Morning News

“Steinhauer's adept characterization of a morally conflicted spy makes this an emotionally powerful read.” —Publishers Weekly

The Tourist was impressive, proving that Steinhauer had the ability to leap from the historical setting of his excellent Eastern European quintet to a vividly imagined contemporary landscape. But this is even better, a dazzling, dizzyingly complex world of clandestine warfare that is complicated further by the affairs of the heart.” —Booklist (starred review)

“Extraordinarily complex and compelling.” —Library Journal