The Spies of Warsaw
If you haven’t read any of Alan Furst’s fine works of espionage starting with his latest will not be a bad move. Or save it for later and read any of the others in any order (with one exception.) Those who have read one or more of them will know what to expect, a completely plausible, minutely researched situation where an ambivalent (that’s not to say insensitve) main character is caught up in a critical episode leading up to or during World War II. In this case the time is 1938 and the place is the doomed city of Warsaw. Your hero is a French military attaché who finds love, as Furst’s characters usually do, while risking his neck for some possibly valuable bit of information about German intentions, at a time when the world was pretty confident that Nazi ambitions could be contained.
Once you read one of these gems you’ll want to read them all. That they are structually similar should not put one off. This one differs a bit in that the hero is not quite as ambivalent as most of the others. Our only recommendeation, repeated from an earlier post, is that you either read Furst’s Night Soldiers first, or preferably save it for last. It has more of an epic quality, and gives a definitive top-to-bottom look at communist recruiting techniques during the period. It does differ from the others in its scope, and may be regarded as close kin to the recent film, The Lives of Others.

