Book description
Spawned in the bleak poverty of an East Anglian fishing port,
Catesby is a spy with a big anti-establishment chip on his shoulder.
He loves his country, but despises the class who run it. Loathed by
the Americans and trusted by the Russians, Catesby is sent to Havana
and Washington to make clandestine contacts. London has authorised
Catesby to offer Moscow a secret deal to break the Cuban Missile
Crisis deadlock. But before that can happen, Catesby meets the
Midnight Swimmer who has a chilling message for Washington. Once
again, the author poses the fundamental question that few spy
novelists answer: What is the greater crime? Betraying your country
or betraying the person you love? A triangle of love and death that
began in Berlin ends in Cuba. On one corner is a war disabled KGB
general, on another corner is his unfulfilled wife … This
sophisticated novel is full of twists and turns that merge historical
fact with fiction. Sleaze and high politics literally share the same
beds. A white-knuckle superpower standoff is played out against a
backdrop of honey trap blackmail, Mafia contracts, assassination and
Vatican scandal. The real blurs into the surreal as Che's car surfs
on the Havana seafront and Fidel takes the pitcher's mound against a
professional baseball team.
Edward Wilson served in Vietnam as an officer in the 5th Special
Forces. His decorations include the Bronze Star and Army Commendation
Medal for Valor. Soon after leaving the army, Wilson became a
permanent expatriate and he formally lost US nationality in 1986 to
become British. For the past thirty years he has been a teacher in
Suffolk, where he lives.