Katya Petrovna, a prodigy of survival from Moscow’s shadowy alleys, faces her greatest challenge yet—cracking the impenetrable armour of the Russian casino mafiya. Once under the casino’s gilded dome, Katya’s mission falters as her cover buckles under scrutiny from the mafiya’s hawk-eyed bosses. As her gambits edge towards checkmate, the line blurs between the hunter and the hunted—with love and life hanging in the balance. Will Katya’s razor-sharp instincts secure her victory, or will the house claim its due?
A former Under Secretary of State and Legal Director to the British Intelligence Agencies, MI5 & MI6.
David spent his working life diving into the cold murky seas of terrorism, espionage and organised crime.
At the forefront of the battle against international terrorism he was among the first to predict its onslaught.
David is recognised, both in the Agencies where he was made Companion Order of the Bath for his work, and in the business he now runs, for his ground-breaking solutions to defeat the terrorists and international organised criminals who threaten us.
this book made its way to me via a gift. i don’t read spy fiction ever really (so question the gift haha) but wanted to give it a go. i found the characterisation of katya quite sexist - she was written as feisty, independent, courageous, bolshy, but she also didn’t really have much depth to her. the book is littered with errors and could do with a proof reader. the story was a bit whack, but the ending was shocking. i did audibly gasp.
One of the worst books I have ever read. Formatting errors throughout the book, poor plot, unlikeable characters. I had been given the next one in the series, but won't bother reading it.
This book is absolutely littered with grammatical and formatting errors. As well as just other errors in general. Why do some sentences randomly split over two lines? Why do some characters literally change names in the middle of a scene?? Why do we have a recap at the start of each chapter as if I’m not the one bloody reading what’s just happened anyway??? Why are all the Russian words in italics, but then in some sentences the author just forgets to keep doing that???? How did this book make it through editing?????
Don’t even get me started on the plot. The main character is dumb beyond belief. If she can be a a G8 spy, then I’d call myself the bloody CEO of the company. The so-called mafia are equally as stupid. 90% of this stuff would just not happen in real life. Prime example: how can Katya hate Kirill for the whole book because he legitimately sells child prostitutes. And then, within the last 50 pages of the book, suddenly he’s the love of her life?? It’s actually laughable.
Also, we do not need paragraphs of detail describing every single room the characters step into and every single outfit they’re wearing. It’s so unnecessary oh my god. The constant reference to how hot and sexy Katya is, is crazy as well. Like Jesus we get it, every guy wants to sleep with her.
Also this is a textbook example of why we should show and not tell. This book over explains everything and literally gives you the internal thoughts of every single character (even the minor ones!). Absolutely nothing is left to interpretation. We’re also just told that Katya is amazing and special and talented and hardened and tough by all the other characters. Without being shown one action that proves these qualities in any way shape or form.
I’m aware I’m rambling now so I’ll stop because this is the longest bloody review I’ve written. I had to get it all out because there’s just so many things that annoyed me about this one.
EDIT: I’ve just seen this person is quite a new author so I do apologise if this is a bit of a mean review but it was my genuine initial reaction to finishing it 5mins ago and I had to be honest.