Catherine Blake is the model war widow. Ever since she lost her RAF
pilot husband in the Battle of Britain, this beautiful aristocrat has
kept a stiff upper lip while caring for victims of the blitz in London's
hospitals. The problem is that Catherine Blake is also a deep-cover Nazi
spy, charged by Hitler with uncovering the details of D-Day. Her nemesis
is Alfred Vicary, a fumbling professor of history barely able to
remember where he placed his threadbare tweed jacket, let alone sustain
a relationship. But Vicary is also a confidant of Winston Churchill's,
who has chosen this reclusive don to run England's critical
counterintelligence operations. Against this backdrop comes Daniel
Silva's The Unlikely Spy, a sophisticated and altogether exceptional
World War II thriller. Based on fact, Silva's fast-paced novel moves
effortlessly from the Berlin High Command's espionage centers to the
U-boat-infested North Sea, from the privileged playgrounds of Long
Island to Hyde Park's shadowy paths - a grand canvas of intrigue that
sweeps the reader along in a breathtaking race against time. If
Catherine escapes to Germany, the Nazis will know the Allied invasion
will be at Normandy; and if Vicary doesn't stop her, all of Britain's
greatest wartime deceptions and ploys will have been for naught. But why
does it seem as if Vicary's superiors want him to fail?