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Spycatcher [Hardcover]

Matthew Dunn
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (95 customer reviews)


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Book Description

August 9, 2011 Spycatcher

“Great talent, great imagination, and real been-there done-that authenticity make this one of the year’s best thriller debuts.”
—Lee Child

“Not since Fleming charged Bond with the safety of the world has the international secret agent mystique been so anchored with an insider’s reality.”
—Noah Boyd, New York Times bestselling author of Agent X and The Bricklayer

“A real spy proves he is a real writer—and a truly deft and inventive one. Spycatcher is a stunning debut.”
—Ted Bell, New York Times bestselling author of Warlord

A real life former field officer, Matthew Dunn makes an extraordinary debut with Spycatcher, a masterwork of international espionage fiction that crackles with electrifying authenticity. Fans of Daniel Silva, Robert Ludlum, Brad Thor, and Vince Flynn will be on the edge of their seats as intelligence agent Will Cochrane—working on a joint covert mission for the CIA and MI6—sets out to capture a brilliant and ruthless Iranian spy. Timely and gripping, Spycatcher rockets the reader into a shadowy world of terrorism and counter-terrorism, and holds them in an iron grip until the last pulse-pounding page is turned.

--This text refers to the Mass Market Paperback edition.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Product Description
Matthew Dunn spent years as an MI6 field operative working on some of the West’s most clandestine missions. He recruited and ran agents, planned and participated in special operations, and operated deep undercover throughout the world. In Spycatcher he draws on this fascinating experience to breathe urgent, dynamic new life into the contemporary spy novel.

Featuring deft and daring superspy Will Cochrane, Dunn paints a nerve-jangling, bracingly authentic picture of today’s secret world. It is a place where trust is precious and betrayal is cheap—and where violent death is the reward for being outplayed by your enemy.

Will Cochrane, the CIA’s and MI6’s most prized asset and deadliest weapon, has known little outside this world since childhood. And he’s never been outplayed. So far…

Will’s controllers task him with finding and neutralizing one of today’s most wanted terrorist masterminds, a man believed to be an Iranian Revolutionary Guard general. Intending to use someone from the man’s past to flush him out of the shadows, Will believes he has the perfect plan, but he soon discovers, in a frantic chase from the capitals of Europe to New York City, that his adversary has more surprises in store and is much more treacherous than anyone he has ever faced—and survived—up to now.



Amazon Exclusive: Jeffrey Deaver Reviews Spycatcher

The author of 22 novels, including Carte Blanche, Jeffrey Deaver has been nominated for six Edgar Awards from the Mystery Writers of America, an Anthony award, a Gumshoe Award, and is a three-time recipient of the Ellery Queen Reader's Award for Best Short Story of the Year.

“How close do you think any of us can get to knowing what it's really like to live the life of a spy—to walk and talk like one, to see the world the way he or she must, to run assets, to hunt and track a target, to outthink brilliant opponents? Well, one way would be to meet a real spy. But then, of course, they might be a bit hard to spot (that's in the job description, after all). Or better, read an excellent new novel by a former spy, one who has the gifts of a born storyteller. Spycatcher is such a novel. And Matthew Dunn is that very talented new author. I know of no other spy thriller that so successfully blends the fascinating nuances of the business of espionage and intelligence work with full-throttle suspense storytelling.” --Jeffery Deaver



Amazon Exclusive: Jeffrey Deaver Interviews Matthew Dunn

Jeffrey Deaver: Matthew, why did you choose to write under your own name and not a pseudonym? Isn’t that what most people who’ve written about espionage work have done? Are there risks to using your own name?

Matthew Dunn: When I was a spy I always operated under completely different identities. At the beginning of every mission, I felt like an actor taking to the stage on the first night. Though an actor can take off his or her costume at the end of the night, often I could not do so for months and in some cases years. I decided to write under my own name for three reasons: First, I wanted to do something that had my real name attached to my work. Second, I felt my readers deserved to know who I really am. And third, I felt it would be cowardly to hide behind another name since I am no longer a spy. Yes, there are severe and immediate risks, and I’m conscious of them every day. But I’ve chosen those risks. If a team comes for me, I’ll deal with it.

JD: What kind of man or woman makes an ideal field officer—one who runs agents?

MD: There are many quantifiable traits – intellect, skills in lateral thinking, a gregarious personality (deployed in exact moments), an unwavering belief that anything is possible, the ability to manipulate, ruthlessness, compassion, leadership, the ability to make rifle-shot decisions, and tremendous courage. But ultimately MI6, the CIA, the French DGSE, the Russian SVR (the successor to the KGB) and Mossad – that is, the truly “global” intelligence services – recruit a particular breed of animal to work as an agent, and one knows that animal when one sees her or him. That person is simply different from everyone else. If you are a good field officer, your agent (i.e. the foreign national you’ve recruited to spy on his country) will trust you with his life. He won’t risk execution by working for just MI6 or whatever institution you represent – he’ll do it for you.

JD: How autonomous does a field officer have to be? And is operating solo an advantage in the world of intelligence and espionage?

MD: Intelligence officers are lone wolves. It’s vital that they don’t make themselves visible. One can’t get the best intelligence by using a sledgehammer approach. To that extent, there are no “superior forces or big guns” when you’re in the field. Your country’s army, navy, and air force are the inferior forces that are liable to get it wrong. And that means you can’t trust or use them. But if you mess up and get caught, you will die.

JD: Can you describe the operation for which you were awarded an unusual, special commendation by the British government?

MD: I can, but I won’t.

JD: Good call. If you had answered, maybe I'd have found one of those red laser dots on my forehead… If there's one vital lesson to be learned in foreign intelligence training, what is it?

MD: Mind-set is key. An MI6 officer believes that he or she can achieve anything and very often that self-belief is justified. MI6 is far and away the best intelligence organization at encouraging that outlook. As a result, and based on what it has achieved, it is without doubt the best intelligence organization in the world.

JD: What do you mean when you say, “When a gun comes out on a deep-cover mission, it’s the worst thing that can happen?” Talk a bit about the physical aspects of espionage.

MD: Officers are typically trained to use guns in tight, urban situations, to deploy highly aggressive and effective unarmed military combat techniques, and to do whatever is necessary to get out of a situation. But the primary role of a spy is to collect intelligence. When guns are deployed – certain direct actions excluded – something has gone wrong. Even when things have gone wrong, many good spies would prefer to die and maintain the integrity of the operation than to pull a weapon. No good intelligence comes out of a fight or torture; these actions only result in the pleadings of a man who wants to live. Morality aside, the CIA’s use of water boarding made men say anything to keep from drowning. Saying anything, or even providing “good information,” is a million miles away from providing intelligence, (i.e. something that is most certainly not public knowledge). For that reason and to their peril, the British learned that torture was ineffective in the Boer War. Guns and torture are anathema to intelligence-gathering activities, but they are also bedfellows.

JD: Is it hard for retiring foreign-service officers to adapt to private life?

MD: Most people who leave are achievers. They get jobs in the top ranks of industry, commerce, government, or maybe some place similar in the arts. But all of us struggle. We are trained to believe that we are better than everyone else when the reality is that we are not. We’ve simply seen different, odd things and had to do a job that requires inordinate self-belief. It’s taken me ten years to adjust to not being a spy. I’m still adjusting.

JD: What about the service do you miss?

MD: I miss the friendships I had with my foreign agents. They would do the most unbelievably brave things for me, but would always be aware of the danger they were in and their own mortality. I respected them and loved them more than MI6 or anyone else, and that is how it is supposed to be. My agents were my family. We laughed together in one-on-one meetings in swanky hotels and war-zone ditches. We cried together. I held their hands and told them to be brave. I watched the fear and defiance in their eyes as they went back to their tasks. But I was never Matthew Dunn. I was someone else even if the emotion was real. I miss my agents, but they don’t miss me because they never knew who I was. I regret that more than anything.

Review

“Great talent, great imagination, and real been-there done-that authenticity make this one of the year’s best thriller debuts. Highly recommended.” (Lee Child )

“Not since Fleming charged Bond with the safety of the world has the international secret agent mystique been so anchored with an insider’s reality. The pacing in Matthew Dunn’s Spycatcher is frenetic, and the plotting is meticulous as it continually doubles back on itself.” (Noah Boyd, author of Agent X and The Bricklayer )

“Once in a while an espionage novelist comes along who has the smack of utter authenticity. Few are as daring as Matthew Dunn, fewer still as up-to-date. This isn’t the Cold War, this isn’t even the last ten years, it’s the CIA and MI6 as they are now.” (John Lawton, author of A Lily of the Field and Black Out )

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: William Morrow; First Edition edition (August 9, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 9780062037671
  • ISBN-13: 978-0062037671
  • ASIN: 0062037676
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.3 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (95 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #695,648 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

As an MI6 field officer, Matthew Dunn recruited and ran agents, coordinated and participated in special operations, and acted in deep-cover roles throughout the world. He operated in highly hostile environments, where, if compromised and captured, he would have been executed. Dunn was trained in all aspects of intelligence collection, deep-cover deployments, small-arms, explosives, military unarmed combat, surveillance, and infiltration.

Medals are never awarded to modern MI6 officers, but Dunn was the recipient of a very rare personal commendation from the secretary of state for foreign and commonwealth affairs for work he did on one mission, which was deemed so significant that it directly influenced the successful conclusion of a major international incident.

During his time in MI6, Dunn conducted approximately seventy missions. All of them were successful. He lives in England.


Customer Reviews

Not the plot, the characters. the dialogue or the writing. Richard A. Mitchell  |  34 reviewers made a similar statement
I did finish the book so I could not really give it a one star. photog48  |  7 reviewers made a similar statement
Book was interesting anf the author developed the characters anf the plot very well. Bob R.  |  14 reviewers made a similar statement
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
29 of 34 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars James Bond Meets Dirk Pitt May 7, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Will Cochrane is a spy on the MI6 payroll. But not just any old pedestrian spy. He is "Spartan", Britain's only super-spy. And he's good. He's very, very good.

MI6 and the CIA know that Iran is plotting a large terrorist event, but don't have details. Cochrane starts with a small lead and is soon on the trail of Megiddo, who runs not only Iran's terrorist operations, but has a finger on nearly every terrorist activity in the world. Time is very much of the essence, and Cochrane zips across the globe, slowly unravelling an incredibly elaborate scheme.

Things move fast, and Cochrane is brilliant but not infallible, which makes everything far more interesting. He's sort of a modern day James Bond, but less debonair and more callous. The plotting here is devious and believable, so much so that Megiddo could well have been based on a real person. I've been to some of the locales, and they are all authentically described. As hair-on-fire spy thrillers go, this has a lot going for it.

My main problem is with Cochrane. Much like Clive Cussler's "Dirk Pitt" character, he absorbs damage that would cripple any normal human, and keeps right on going. Early on, he's shot three times, with exit wounds through the abdomen. The next day he's up and walking, two days later he's moving at nearly full speed. Another time he's shot through the shoulder, seriously enough that his left arm is hanging uselessly by his side. A day later, he uses his left hand to strangle a strong man to death. He's about one step away from being a T-1000 cyborg unit, and that detracts from an otherwise tight story.

This book is just a hair short of being great. Make Cochrane more believably human and this series will be unstoppable. Count me in for the next few installments; I can't wait to see where this is all headed!
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27 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
That's my plot summary, right there.

Author Dunn may have a background in intelligence, but he writes the kind of story I'd expect to see from a testosterone-raddled teenager, or maybe from Marvel Comics.

First, as many others have mentioned, there's the opening of the story that sees our hero, Will Cochrane, riddled in the gut with three bullets. Not only does that barely slow him down, but he's able to continue on with his mission, spending hours in airplanes, carrying on all his normal duties, beating people up, killing other people, etcetera. I have to wonder how much of a superman he is when he's NOT suffering gunshot wounds.

Bring on the kryptonite.

Chapter 13 is a great example of the idiocy of this book. Cochrane goes to the home of an NSA officer - to whom Dunn doesn't even bother giving a name - breaks in, beats the guy up, and threatens to kill his family. This unnamed character is a LOYAL American intelligence analyst. Why does he do this? Because he's trying to determine if an NSA intelligence source named "Hubble" has been possibly compromised.

He doesn't go through channels at the NSA; he doesn't approach the guy as a loyal compatriot. He beats the snot out of him for absolutely no reason at all. Then, when he's done and ready to leave, he threatens the guy and his wife and kids, saying, "Do this, and you and your loved ones get to live. Fail, and everything you love will die."

What the hell? This is supposed to be believable? Why wouldn't the guy report this to his bosses at the NSA immediately? It was so ridiculous I laughed out loud. This is the kind of puerile nonsense you expect from teenagers, as I said, or maybe a Vin Deisel movie.

Cochrane has the uncanny ability to take two or three international flights a day, simply to attend meetings. How does he do it? Are there no security lines in European airports? Don't those pesky - or maybe not so pesky - bullet wounds EVER bother him?

Apparently not, to both questions.

It goes on like that throughout the book. Super-duper-spy Cochrane taking on impossible odds and beating them every time in the most unlikely and unbelievable ways. Characters that are even less than two-dimensional, like the NSA analyst who didn't even rate a name.

Why would Lee Child and Jeffrey Deaver (on the Amazon product page) hawk this book? I can only guess that neither actually read the darned thing, and both were star-struck by a guy who has an actual background in intelligence. But being in intelligence and being able to write about it are two completely different things.

Obviously.
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18 of 22 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars Silly adolescent dumb dumb dumb novel. April 28, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
We have this British tough guy, code name Spartan.

For a moment, pretend his name is Biggles. It will help you understand how dumb this book is.

Biggles starts by protecting his Iranian source, in New York City for no good reason except the author probably cannot describe Tehran, from Iranian hit squads -- dozens of well-armed Iranian hit-spies in the Big Apple. What a sensible set-up.

He shoots 8-12 of them, and his compatriots, Able, Baker, and Charlie, or shall we call them Apple, Butthead, and Chump, are also killed. (Nobody ever mentions them again, because who cares about dead British agents.) He kills his Iranian source rather than letting him be captured, and as he falls into unconsciousness, he notes his three wounds, including a gaping hole in his abdomen.

Biggles wakes up the next morning feeling a bit stiff, but OK. Because a sorta doctor from the CIA has "fixed him". And because Spartan-Biggles is too damn tough to let three bullet wounds slow him down for a freaking minute. He pops a few pills and begins emoting.

After a strange, wooden, blocky conversation with CIA guy Patrick, he flies home. During the conversation, we learn that "Spartan-Biggles" is the one British agent code named Spartan, the product of a training process so tough that IF you survive it, you get to be the one guy named Biggles..... err, Spartan.

Yes, this makes sense. Sure. It takes several hundred thousand dollars to train one special forces trooper, so how about creating a training program that takes several of these guys, and trains them so hard that they DIE, and if one happens to survive, lets call him Biggles and make him a super-agent. By becoming Biggles, I think he gets $11 more per week.

As we progress, we find that our Biggles has a great habit. He often looks around the room, at all the people, and notes to himself and to them, that he might just have to kill them all, and of course, he could, and they know he could, because he is Biggles, the super-tough guy. When a book fails to note that several armed men can kill one armed man, even one with a cool code name, the book has lost touch with reality.

Biggles is no George Smiley. The conceit of this book is that Biggles is such a spymaster, that his skills will be unique in catching spies. Err... no, the plotting does not build, there are no layers, there are lots of shootings and knifings.

This book continues on this adolescent route, with a leaden hero who is laughable, who survives anything, kills dozens, and is a BAD comic book hero. Most of these adventure type novels have their traces of adolesence... Jack Reacher wanders the world a bit too much. Jack Ryan goes from analyst to shooter with no pause. But this guy lacks the tiniest bit of realism, the layer of connection to what being a tough guy is really all about (and it is not cartoon violence and walking away from gaping holes in your abdomen).

The writing is blocky, the dialogue is so bad it makes me giggle, the posturing lead character is such an ass that somebody would have hit him on the head with a shovel when his back was turned, years ago, as he was noting to the room that he just might have to kill them all. It becomes clear that the author is one of those guys whose toughest real life experience was a paper cut, who barely understands how to fight off a nap, and has no clear sense of how real people conduct themselves in a world of violence. I mean, the author has "MI6" experience -- did he shoot 8 guys in Central Park on a counter-terrorism operation? If not, then why does he make his hero live out such teen fantasies?

The author should have asked himself... if I called this guy Biggles instead of Spartan, would it work? And the answer would have been yes, because the book is a farce.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Spycatcher
I'm near the end of this book. The plot is great and most of the characters are within a reality's throw of life. Read more
Published 1 month ago by msgsavage
1.0 out of 5 stars Please buy this book off the bargain rack...
If you have the opportunity to buy this book off the bargain rack or check it out free from a library, then go for it because it is probably one of the most unintentionally... Read more
Published 2 months ago by aatdb
5.0 out of 5 stars A Master of Suspense
There is nothing quite like a story about a spy to end all spies being written by ... a former spy himself. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Candace E. Salima
3.0 out of 5 stars Narnia
The Narnia series is fantasy,
Yet each story was written right after WW2 and dedicated to children.
Likely children of men who died. Read more
Published 4 months ago by John C
4.0 out of 5 stars good storyline-lots of action!
The book is well written and guides the reader through various action scenarios. The author takes you on a ride that's fast pace-hold on an enjoy.
Published 5 months ago by Lynee Bennett
3.0 out of 5 stars Good book, but not great
Will Cochrane is MI6's most valuable asset; he is the agent called Spartan, killer of killers, one whose identity is known to just two men in England one of whom is the Prime... Read more
Published 5 months ago by C. Perez
5.0 out of 5 stars great book
Nice plot, good character development. Read it on the Kindle app. Waiting for the Kindle edition of the second book.
Published 7 months ago by Carl T. Camden
2.0 out of 5 stars SPYCATCHER: A Girl's Man In A Man's World
Yeah, you can call me a lair (if you're so inclined), but I've actually had the good fortune of knowing two gentlemen who worked (in completely different capacities) for the CIA. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Edward Lee
1.0 out of 5 stars Wouldn't recomend
Didn't hold my interest from the start and very drawn out. Too slow for me. Not one with a good character or plot.
Published 7 months ago by Sandra Barber
5.0 out of 5 stars Very Enjoyable.
Great read, great 21 century spy thriller, fast paced with interesting well written characters, if you like Jack Higgins you'll love this. Read more
Published 8 months ago by 7445LC
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