Booklist Reviews
*Starred Review* When we last saw Christopher Marlowe ("Kit") Cobb, war correspondent, secret agent, and all-around soldier of fortune, he was in civil-war-torn Mexico, cavorting with Pancho Villa (The Hot Country, 2012). Now, in 1915, with WWI raging, and the neutral U.S. edging toward involvement, he's aboard the doomed Lusitania, tracking a German American who may be a secret-service agent and falling under the spell of a famous actress, Selene Bourgani, who has secrets of her own. After the Lusitania meets its watery grave, Kit lands in London, where he continues to shadow the actress (well, not exactly: he's fallen in love with her and does most of his "shadowing" in her bed). Meanwhile, there's a German assassin out there somewhere called Der Wolf, whose eyes may be on both Selene and Kit. The Wolf's trail leads to Istanbul, where Selene's motives gradually become clear and where Kit lands in a blood-soaked finale. Butler juggles a lot of elements here, in terms of both plotting, as double and triple crosses merge like lanes in a traffic roundabout, and tone, as the novel commingles character-driven historical fiction with melodrama and swashbuckling action. Somehow, though, it all works; on one level, Butler is playing with genre conventions in an almost mad-scientist manner, but at the same time, he holds the reader transfixed, like a kid at a Saturday matinee. Copyright 2013 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Butler's sequel to TheHot Country begins with war correspondent and part-time government agent Christopher Marlowe "Kit" Cobb preparing for a journey to cover the Great War in Europe. With America still neutral, he doesn't anticipate any problems as he boards the Lusitania. His mission is to follow a German agent and discover who the agent is meeting and what their plans are. Also aboard is exotic leading silent-film actress Selene Bourgani. After their ship is torpedoed, the survivors move on to London where the intrigue deepens, and Cobb witnesses one of the first air raids in history. He follows his suspects east toward Turkey and an exciting climax in the capital city. VERDICT Butler uses period details, especially regarding the motives of the various characters, and cameos of actual historic personalities to good effect without weighing down the tale. He has written an exciting thriller with plenty of action, romance, and danger set against a compelling setting. Fans of historical spy fiction will enjoy this fast-paced journey through a world at war. [See Prepub Alert, 4/22/13.]—Dan Forrest, Western Kentucky Univ. Libs., Bowling Green
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