The End of the String by Charles McCarry
Set in Ndala, Africa, the story follows a revolution of a brutal dictatorship. The revolutionary, Benjamin, is chief of police and he takes on a secret agent to oversee everything in hopes of gaining the approval of the United States. The story is like a novel, but short and sweet. Charming, enchanting, it’s a marvel and great way to start this anthology.
Section 7 (A) by Lee Child
The narrator looks at all the agents gathered around in his apartment, noting not only their personality and interplay but their flaws and the pitfalls in their operation. Turns out the narrator is actually Lee Childs, who calls his agent at the end of the story. A clever play on the reader, it's a marvel of postmodernism
Destiny City by James Grady
A “right now story” that has both spies and terrorists. Both are racing around the clock in Washington, D.C. The twist? We got an undercover FBI agent in an active terrorist cell.
Neighbors by Joseph Finger
This story goes one step beyond. Instead of straight up “spy,” it’s about a Boston Architect bombarded by news reports of terrorist cells in the US, who spies on his mysterious neighbor.
East of Suez, West of Charing Cross Road by John Lawton
An hilarious story of George Hosefield who shares the name of one of his superiors. After being caught with a young woman (not his wife) in a set-up planned by a Russian, George Hosefield is mistaken for the other George Hosefield and is blackmailed. Not wanting the photo leaked to his wife, George Hosefield feeds false information to the Russian, making up a web of lies as he goes along.
Father’s Day by John Weisman
A soldier turned CIA agent deals with internal politics as his superior brings in a possible terrorist with seemingly important information.
Casey at the Bat by Stephen Hunter
During World War 2, a Brit and an American are tasked with bombing a bridge. The brit, George, is hilarious. Nothing affects him and he goes about with such British posh it’s amazing. He knows who to call when he needs Soviet help, he knows how to charm Germans into thinking he’s one of their own. His only fault is he can’t tell Americans apart.
BEST QUOTE: “His dick was as big as wine bottle”
Max is Calling by Garye Lynds
A spy is taken under the wind of an ex-spy named Cowboy, who teaches him that everyone has their own secrets - even Cowboy
The Interrogator by David Morrell
Andrew is a born interrogator, and here’s a day in the life. It’s horrifying.
Sleeping with My Assassin by Andrew Klavan
After the fall of the Berlin wall, everyone’s out to get the spies. Americans want to shut up their own (you know what that means) and Russia wants to kill them. Knowing he’s screwed either way, an ex-spy gets involved with a woman he’s convinced is his assassin from one of the countries. He does it because it makes him happy, and why not be happy before you blow everything open? A gripping tale of paranoia and PTSD (maybe?), the story never gives you concrete answers but instead opts to give you just enough
The Hamburg Redemption by Robert Wilson
An ex-spy with a conscience is drinking himself into oblivion, drowning out his sorrows and those around him telling him he, along with his fellow ex agents, are in danger. He wakes up with a disabled woman with no leg, intent on exposing his (and his country’s) dark secrets to the world. Then he learns the woman he woke up holds the key to his redemption. Blood and twisted, it's Robert Wilson at his finest. It's also wonderfully written.
The Courier by Don Fesperman
During World War 2, two spies are tasked with finding the right person for the right job. The right job is to find someone who will break under German interrogators, admitting the Allies Plan to them. The twist? The plan this ‘right person’ will be given false information, tricking the Nazis. It’s Operation Mincemeat on a smaller, more personal scale. They choose a pilot who will be shot down by the Germans, and once that is done all they can is sit back and wait. The narrator thinks about his son and baseball, how one boy would try but not be good enough. Twisting baseball and the USA’s war plans into one? Now that’s gloriously twisted.
Hedged In by Stella Rimington
Ron Haddock is an agent who once nabbed a gun from an enemy. Years later, he defends that gun from everyone including his wife a la The Revenant (the real life event, not the Leo DiCaprio movie).
You Know What’s Going On by Olen Steinhauer
Aslim Taslam is a Somali terrorist whose group broke off a larger terrorist group after an ideological dispute. That’s the concrete from which this foundation is made. To change metaphors, the story is a web. Three threads interconnect into one bigger, grander, story. We go from Geneva to Rome, to Kenya, swapping spectives from Paul, an American spy undercover as a banker, Nabil, a Somali Jighadist, Sam, an American spy, and Benjamin, a Kenyan police officer. Paul is an unwitting pawn in a harrowing opening that keeps the reader interested. Nabil’s story shows a perspective of a terrorist, adding a human element to what most authors (coughupdikecough) make into stereotypes. Then we get Sam, who proves to be the most interesting character since the two previous stories both showed two radically different sides to him. Thus, Sam’s story is able to dive in deeper. He’s a spy, first and foremost, and everything he tells you might be a lie. But his story shows he’s not a calm, collected James Bond type, rather he’s a human who can get stressed, scared, curious, horrified, etc. Nevertheless, he’s also dangerously manipulative. Lastly we have Benjamin (again with Benjamin, first and last stories have people in Africa named Benjamin?) who shows us the ground work and the lives of people who live in areas. It shows how, much like the spies, tragedy comes and goes as if they “had never been” even though the affects are felt in the air, culminating in the last line “[d]espite the sweltering heat, Benjamin had even stopped sweating.” It’s a great story to end this anthology.