Editorial Content for BOX 88
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On December 21, 1988, Pan Am Flight 103 was the target of a terrorist attack as a bomb tore the plane apart over the Scottish village of Lockerbie. All 243 passengers and 16 crew members were killed, as well as 11 residents of Lockerbie. Charles Cumming uses this tragedy as the impetus for his latest espionage novel, BOX 88.
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s quote at the beginning of the book frankly speaks to the life of the spy: “We have as many personalities as we have friends.” In present-day London, members of MI5 are leading an investigation into BOX 88, a long-defunct transatlantic black ops team. Current events have shown not only the possible existence of this group but also their potential reemergence.
"BOX 88 is a long novel, but it is never dull and will make readers recall the work of John le Carré and Ken Follett."
At the center of this weighty tome is Lachlan Kite, who was a young man when BOX 88 was in its infancy. He cut his teeth by going deep cover and befriending the Iranian terrorist who may have been the primary figure responsible for the Lockerbie bombing. Following this act of terrorism, he pretty much fell off the map. He is now involved in the family business, manning an upscale hotel, while his wife, a Swiss-American woman, is a doctor. What brings him to the surface again, publicly, is his appearance at the funeral of a childhood friend.
Now that his name is once again on the radar, it will be a race among members of BOX 88, MI5 and angry Iranian terrorists still bearing quite a grudge to see who will find Lachlan first. At one point, both he and his wife are captured by the Iranians. It will force him to revisit a dark past that he has tried to forget, open up old wounds, and reconnect with people he had hoped to never see again. He must do this if he wants to keep his family safe, but it may come at the cost of the government and the world he used to work so secretly to protect.
Few writers today can create realistic and cutting espionage fiction like Charles Cumming. BOX 88 is a long novel, but it is never dull and will make readers recall the work of John le Carré and Ken Follett. It is nice to see a writer who respects such legends and continues to do his best to keep the fire burning for the genre’s future.
Teaser
Lachlan Kite is a member of BOX 88, an elite transatlantic black ops outfit so covert that not even MI6 and the CIA are certain of its existence. But even the best spy can’t anticipate every potential threat in a world where dangerous actors lurk around every corner. At the funeral of his childhood best friend, Lachlan falls into a trap that drops him into the hands of a potentially deadly interrogation, with his pregnant wife, also abducted, being held as collateral for the information he’s sworn on his own life to protect. In order to save his family, Lachlan will be forced to revisit painful memories of a special assignment from 30 years ago that allowed him special access to one of Iran’s most dangerous men.
Promo
Lachlan Kite is a member of BOX 88, an elite transatlantic black ops outfit so covert that not even MI6 and the CIA are certain of its existence. But even the best spy can’t anticipate every potential threat in a world where dangerous actors lurk around every corner. At the funeral of his childhood best friend, Lachlan falls into a trap that drops him into the hands of a potentially deadly interrogation, with his pregnant wife, also abducted, being held as collateral for the information he’s sworn on his own life to protect. In order to save his family, Lachlan will be forced to revisit painful memories of a special assignment from 30 years ago that allowed him special access to one of Iran’s most dangerous men.
About the Book
A secret agent comes of age --- and reckons with the legacy of his first mission --- in this thriller by New York Times bestseller Charles Cumming, “the best of the new generation of British spy writers” (The Observer).
Lachlan Kite is a member of BOX 88, an elite transatlantic black ops outfit so covert that not even MI6 and the CIA are certain of its existence. But even the best spy can’t anticipate every potential threat in a world where dangerous actors lurk around every corner. At the funeral of his childhood best friend, Lachlan falls into a trap that drops him into the hands of a potentially deadly interrogation, with his pregnant wife, also abducted, being held as collateral for the information he’s sworn on his own life to protect.
Thirty years earlier Lachlan, then just out of the upper class boarding school where he was reared, was BOX 88’s newest recruit. In the haze of a gap year summer, in which the study of spycraft was intertwined with a journey of self-discovery, he cut his teeth on a special assignment on the coast of France, where a friendship allowed him special access to one of Iran’s most dangerous men. Today, Lachlan’s nostalgia for the trip is corrupted by recollection of the deceit that accompanied it but, in order to save his family, he’ll be forced to revisit those painful memories one last time.
A pulse-pounding narrative that straddles two eras --- 1989 and 2020 --- BOX 88 is a “wonderfully taut, exciting and up-to-date spy thriller” that introduces a compelling new character and a captivating international storyline (Spectator, Books of the Year).
Audiobook available, read by Charlie Ansen