First Mission Paris: A Spy's Guide to the City of Lights
Book Details
Author(s)Leone R. Giuliani
ISBN / ASINB01DCR0R28
ISBN-13978B01DCR0R23
Sales Rank220,054
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
In the world of literature spies, all superheroes are tough. Sharp. And deadly serious. They know how to fight, they know how to kill. But not Enrico Moretti - he's just smart. And he's a lover, not a killer. He might be basically undertrained in standard James Bond skills or attitudes, but he knows something about seducing. And gambling. And drinking. And being a former police negotiator, most of all: storytelling. Armed with nothing but his brain and knowledge he always seems to talk his way out of troubles. Could this be the right man to go to Paris, retrieve a stolen list of Europol’s crucial undercover agents, minimize the damage and capture the traitor?
»A fun book, ideal for light reading, where even more demanding readers won't feel cheated«, was the first thing that initial reviewers of the manuscript declared. They also described Enrico Moretti as some kind of intellectual MacGyver, the main character we’ve been waiting for.
If you consider the world of super spy heroes too fictional and espionage documentaries too boring, but you do love mystery, thriller and suspense, you’ll read this novel in one night - with a sip of wine and a midnight saxophone. Just let this vagabond show you around - let him be your travel guide, maybe a whole new Paris will emerge. And who knows, if you end up improving your poker strategy, learn something useful about practical police psychology or increase your ability to talk your way out of trouble when necessary, you won’t blame him for that.
After all… Who said that reading spy thrillers can't be pure pleasure?
»A fun book, ideal for light reading, where even more demanding readers won't feel cheated«, was the first thing that initial reviewers of the manuscript declared. They also described Enrico Moretti as some kind of intellectual MacGyver, the main character we’ve been waiting for.
If you consider the world of super spy heroes too fictional and espionage documentaries too boring, but you do love mystery, thriller and suspense, you’ll read this novel in one night - with a sip of wine and a midnight saxophone. Just let this vagabond show you around - let him be your travel guide, maybe a whole new Paris will emerge. And who knows, if you end up improving your poker strategy, learn something useful about practical police psychology or increase your ability to talk your way out of trouble when necessary, you won’t blame him for that.
After all… Who said that reading spy thrillers can't be pure pleasure?
