Fascinating, compelling and one of the most unique 'spy' dramas I've encountered, the author immerses the reader with brilliance. There's little doubt Silva's characters, pacing and narrative approach redefine page turner while the topical research is impeccable. Feigning the usual overuse of violence, blood and hatred, he replaces them with international intrigue, and with this story, the use of Russian wealth as a weapon against democracy.
Here we find Gabriel Allon as Director of Israeli intelligence where he learns of the loss of his friend Victor Orlov. Having waged a tireless campaign against the authoritarian kleptocrats in the Kremlin, a reporter working for Orlov's anti-Kremlin publication delivers documents laced with a deadly nerve agent. Soon after she slips away from London and M16 assumes she's a Russian assassin. But Allon's knowledge of the Kremlin has him come to an entirely different conclusion; one that involves Russian money laundering hiding a sophisticated operation to undermine democracy.
Tracing the source of the nerve agent, intelligence gathering points to RhineBank run by Arkady Asimov, a financial mastermind that makes Bernie Madoff look like a boy scout. A multi-billionaire/womanizer connected directly to Russia's president, he's ruthless, greedy and unruly as they come. With Asimov's weakness for the arts and women, Allon traps Isabel Brennan, a beautiful cellist and employee of RhineBank's dirtiest operations using his leverage as director of intelligence. As typical, Gabriel assembles a team whose goal is to appeal to Asimov's greed with a scheme that uses Isabel and long time friend/financier Martin Landesman as its foundation.
Extremely complex, the scheme takes the reader from London, then Amsterdam and eventually to Geneva while the plot evolves with each chapter. Silva's mastery shines when he moves from the world of Russian money laundering to the 2020 election where a plot to assassinate the president elect comes into play. Using fictionalized names for Putin and Trump, Silva's final twist has the reader wonder if he was privy to US intelligence.
Of the two previous Allon books I'd read, this was the first where he was Director of Israeli Intelligence. With use of concise, 'cliff hanger' style chapters, Silva demonstrates extensive knowledge of the spy game, art, cuisine and 'money' that create a compelling, immersive experience. With a personal preference for literary fiction, its my humble opinion this author is one of the best, regardless of genre.