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From Barnes & Noble
Even before Frederick Stahl arrives in pre-World War II Paris, he knows that he will be watched. This Hollywood actor is, after all, an international star who is making a film in a foreign country, not an everyday occurrence. But not all the people who are watching Stahl are movie buffs; German agents and French fascists pay close, furtive attention to alien influences that might affect their interests. Little do they know at first that Stahl harbors his own secrets: Appalled by recent European developments, he has thrown his lot into a clandestine group of anti-Nazi spies. Once again, Alan Furst demonstrates that he is a spy novelist worthy of comparison to John Le Carré. Now in trade paperback and NOOK Book.
Overview
It is the late summer of 1938, Europe is about to explode, the Hollywood film star Fredric Stahl is on his way to Paris to make a movie for Paramount France. The Nazis know he’s coming—a secret bureau within the Reich Foreign Ministry has for years been waging political warfare against France, using bribery, intimidation, and corrupt newspapers to weaken French morale and degrade France’s will to defend herself.
For their purposes, ...