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Praise for "East
Past Warsaw" |
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"In the third
novel-length outing of Casey Collins and her
so-improbable-they-have-to-be-real cohorts Diana Deverell has once
again crafted a tale that makes you pray it's fiction.
Unlike James Bond who dashed from international
crisis to international crisis with nary a thought to hearth and
home, Casey Collins, like all women, juggles concerns about people
in her life with the demands of her job. A beloved father in
terrifying thrall to Alzheimer's disease, a godson just recovering
from radiation-induced leukemia, a dear friend in late pregnancy,
and a lover who has grown distant compete for Casey's attention with
stolen plutonium probably bound for the insanity that passes for
logic in North Korea. Casey knows all too well that the fall of the
Soviet Union left thousands of nuclear warheads, and other
fissionable materials, under the control of unscrupulous and
desperate people who are only too happy to sell to the highest
bidder. Women take center stage in East Past Warsaw, on both sides of the
good/bad equation. The scope and importance of the action and
issues involved in all of Deverell's books (this is a good time to
read 12 Drummers Drumming and Night on Fire if you
haven't already done so) at first blush seem to say 'torn from the
headlines.' In reality, they are the details behind the two
paragraph story buried on page 27 of your local paper whose lead
reads something like 'stolen plutonium, believed bound for North
Korea, has been recovered by agents of (a very anonymous sounding
international agency).'”
--S.E. Warwick, Mystery Reviewer |
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Praise for "12
Drummers Drumming" |
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"Chilling suspense and heated passions--a brilliant debut."
-- Barbara Parker, author of Suspicion of
Deceit |
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"Here's a title
to add to your short list of espionage stories with female
protagonists. (Yes, there's le Carre's LITTLE DRUMMER GIRL, but not
much more.) . . . Deverell covers a lot of spy-rich territory here,
involving not only the U.S. State Department, but also the Mossad
and intelligence agencies in Poland and former East Germany. It's a
good thing she had the foresight to provide a key; readers may need
it to keep the players straight as the action speeds along."
--
Booklist
- Stephanie Zvirin |
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"Diana has
skillfully captured the drama and detail of Foreign Service life and
the relentless, methodical battle against the borderless terrorism."
-- Ralph Frank, Ambassador |
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"Diana Deverell
applies her first hand knowledge and her literary skills to a
thriller called 12 DRUMMERS DRUMMING which will keep you on your
toes. She writes with a polish and a flair that holds nothing back
in the areas of terror, torture and adventure as well as in more
tender worlds of love and loyalties. . . . Deverell has concocted an
incredible plot and carries it off well."
--
National Public Radio
- Carolyn Spector |
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"12 DRUMMERS
DRUMMING is a dynamite action thriller. It kept me up well past my
bedtime. I could not put it down. Had to find out how Casey Collins,
its FSO heroine, thwarts a Libyan terrorist plot. Since I served in
San Salvador with Diana quite a while ago, I could be biased in my
favorable appraisal of her book, but I don't think so. She writes in
the first person, purporting still to be a FSO, working in S/CT,
fighting terrorism. Drawing lightly on her State Department
background and heavily on a vivid imagination, her tale of adventure
is gripping . . . all of this is lightly spiced with sex and heavily
seasoned with violent deaths, mostly, but not entirely, of bad guys.
All in all, the Foreign Service's loss of Diana Deverell is a great
gain for readers of international thrillers. Best of all, she is
working on a new novel."
-- Deane R. Hinton, Career Ambassador
(ret.) |
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"Non-stop
suspense and an intriguing plot that will keep you guessing until
the end. 12 DRUMMERS DRUMMING is a splendid first novel . . . If you
enjoyed Maureen Tan's AKA Jane, don't miss this! Highly
recommended."
--
Booked for Murder, Ltd. mystery book store
- Mary Helen Becker |
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"Don't look to
12 DRUMMERS DRUMMING if you are seeking something in the James Bond
tradition. Instead, with a protagonist who makes her share of
mistakes, we have someone here who is far more real and who more
closely resembles LeCarré's anti-heroes."
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I Love a Mystery
- John A. Broussard |
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"Diana Deverell
was a U.S. Foreign Service Officer in such place as San Salvador and
Poland. So when she has the central character of her tough and
moving debut thriller give us inside details of a State Department
agency dedicated to fighting terrorists, they have the smack and
tang of reality. . . . a milieu worthy of the best of Len Deighton,
if not John LeCarre. With those and other masters of the espionage
genre making increasingly rare appearances these days, it's good to
have someone as skilled as Deverell arriving so stylishly on the
scene."
--
Amazon.com
- Dick Adler |
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Praise for "Night
On Fire" |
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"While
the stunning political changes in
Europe
virtually ended one genre of espionage writing, they opened up new
possibilities for another: counterterrorist stories. Eugene writer
Diana Deverell quickly established herself (with one book, as a
matter of fact) as a master of that genre. 12 DRUMMERS DRUMMING
introduced readers to counterterrorist expert Casey Collins--and to
Deverell's facile use of language.
The pace is fast, the characterizations are strong, and Deverell has
even more finely honed her ability to make language pull us into the
action: "I touched her shoulder, my eyes on the slicked down strands
of her hair. The overhead fixture highlighted the gray strands,
marbling the red. I smelled the strawberry gel she put on it,
overlaid by the odor of meadow grasses from Dyrehave, beneath both
the rank scent of her terror."
Once a
Foreign Service officer herself, Deverell knows the terrain she
writes about very well, whether it be the physical
Europe,
the political Europe, or the dynamic and uneasy blend of cultures
that a millennia of togetherness/separation has wrought. NIGHT ON
FIRE places you in the middle of a very real landscape.
In
fact, everything about this book seems very real: the people, the
places, the action. All that makes for a thriller that grips rather
than merely interests, a thriller that grabs you by the throat and
makes you come along for the ride. And with Deverell in the driver's
seat, the ride is unforgettable."
--
The Statesman Journal
- Dan Hayes |
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"Diana
Deverell has once again taken us to the slippery and dangerous place
where criminals, terrorists, cops, spies and diplomats collude and
connive and deceive. The characters guiding us are like the ones she
knows from her own experience--good, but flawed people confused and
frustrated by moral, legal and bureaucratic conundrums."
-- Donald R.
Hamilton, former Deputy Director of the State Department's
Counterterrorism Office |
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"Black
market missiles and warring bikers mix dangerously with a teenage
boy's medical emergency and a troubling, out-of-the-past romance in
Deverell's solid second Casey Collins novel (after 12 DRUMMERS
DRUMMING). The engaging narrative is an adroit blend of soap opera
and action-adventure, with the human relationships sharing center
stage with the gripping mystery and the wily plot twists. Thanks to
sharp storytelling, the intertwining subplots feed seamlessly into
the main plot line, and Deverell's fine-tuned first-person narration
showcases Casey's intelligence and emotional heft to equally
involving effect."
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Publishers Weekly |
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"Night
on Fire is an excellent international espionage thriller that
brings to life the anti-terrorism efforts of American and Europe.
The story line is non-stop with treason and double cross as the name
of the game. However, what makes Diana Deverell's novel worth
reading is the author allows her characters to fully develop so that
readers feel concern for them. Anyone who enjoys an entertaining
espionage thriller will want to read Ms. Deverell's superb novel."
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I Love a Mystery
- Harriet Klausner |
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"Deverell
successfully juggles at least three distinct plot lines throughout
the book. A number of off-the-beaten track foreign locations,
showdowns and passionate interludes are deftly detailed before
Deverell pulls everything neatly together at the end."
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The Philadelphia City Paper |
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"Armchair detectives and accidental tourists are in store for a
summer treat with Diana Deverell's second spy thriller. ...For
readers fond of things Scandinavian, NIGHT ON FIRE is set almost
entirely in Denmark in mid-summer, with a dank interlude in
Devon
to chill the overheated reader. ...Bodice-ripping lust and
surprising connections between sub-plots propel this thriller."
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Tri-County News
- Mary Minn Sirag |
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"Deverell's skill at spinning a complex and twisted plot remains
undiminished from 12 DRUMMERS DRUMMING, the first in this series.
...The Danish setting is another plus. While the book never bogs
down with long descriptions, Deverell's knowledge and obvious
affection for the country and its people add another layer of depth
to an already solid work."
--
Crescent Blues
- Donna Andrews |
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