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Reviews for A question of betrayal

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Only four months after that desperate affair in Berlin from Death in Focus (2019), photographer Elena Standish is called on again for another dangerous mission in 1933 Germany.Peter Howard, of MI6, wants Elena to know that Aiden Strother, the lover who betrayed her six years ago, didnt betray his country as well: Hes been sent into Trieste as an undercover agent. Now that Aidens handler, waiter Max Klausner, has disappeared, Peter is worried that Aidens in danger as well, and he needs to extract him and the information he has on a radical splinter group of the Fatherland Front, which is raising money for the National Socialists, as quickly as possible. Since nobody knows Aiden better than Elena, shes the logical, albeit unwilling candidate. And she adapts to the rapidly shifting landscape of alliances and treacheries just as well as last time. When Elenas sister, war widow Margot Driscoll, travels to Berlin for her friend Cecily Cordells wedding, she finds herself brushing up against the Fatherland Front as well. So does Elenas grandfather, former MI6 chief Lucas Standish, when his old Cambridge friend Gladstone Canning dies under suspicious circumstances soon after warning Lucas about the Fronts activity. How can the benighted, divided Brits, their most trusted institutions honeycombed with traitors, possibly stand up to such nefarious threats?Readers who share Perrys comfortable 20/20 historical hindsight wont be surprised by a thing. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Only four months after “that desperate affair in Berlin” from Death in Focus (2019), photographer Elena Standish is called on again for another dangerous mission in 1933 Germany. Peter Howard, of MI6, wants Elena to know that Aiden Strother, the lover who betrayed her six years ago, didn’t betray his country as well: He’s been sent into Trieste as an undercover agent. Now that Aiden’s handler, waiter Max Klausner, has disappeared, Peter is worried that Aiden’s in danger as well, and he needs to extract him and the information he has on a radical splinter group of the Fatherland Front, which is raising money for the National Socialists, as quickly as possible. Since nobody knows Aiden better than Elena, she’s the logical, albeit unwilling candidate. And she adapts to the rapidly shifting landscape of alliances and treacheries just as well as last time. When Elena’s sister, war widow Margot Driscoll, travels to Berlin for her friend Cecily Cordell’s wedding, she finds herself brushing up against the Fatherland Front as well. So does Elena’s grandfather, former MI6 chief Lucas Standish, when his old Cambridge friend Gladstone Canning dies under suspicious circumstances soon after warning Lucas about the Front’s activity. How can the benighted, divided Brits, their most trusted institutions honeycombed with traitors, possibly stand up to such nefarious threats? Readers who share Perry’s comfortable 20/20 historical hindsight won’t be surprised by a thing. Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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