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December 1803: A French invasion fleet is poised to cross the
Channel and storm the beaches of southern England. A member of
Napoleon’s inner circle—disaffected by Napoleon’s creeping
tyranny—contacts the British naval intelligence service in hopes
of defecting to London. His escape plan calls for a rendezvous at
an international chess tournament in Frankfurt—a rare opportunity
for him to travel outside France. Naval intelligence sends its top
man—and best chess player—Captain Thomas Grey, to orchestrate
the Frenchman’s escape to England. But Grey’s mission changes
dramatically when the defector demands that his pro-Napoleon
daughter come with him—expecting Grey to act not just as escort
but kidnapper. The second novel in J. H. Gelernter’s already
lauded Captain Grey series, Captain Grey’s Gambit continues a
story that is “smart, fast, twisty, and dangerous” (Lee Child)
in a “richly imagined early nineteenth-century world” (Richard
Snow). The second novel in J. H. Gelernter’s already lauded
Captain Grey series, Captain Grey’s Gambit continues a story that
is “smart, fast, twisty, and dangerous” (Lee Child) in a
“richly imagined early nineteenth-century world” (Richard
Snow).
It's 1803. The Napoleonic Wars are raging, Britain is on her heels
and His Majesty's Secret Service has just lost its best agent,
Thomas Grey. Deeply depressed by his wife's untimely death, Grey
resigns from the service and accepts an offer to join a lumber firm
in Boston. But when a sea battle with a privateer forces the ship
carrying him west to make port in neutral Portugal, Grey is
approached with a counteroffer: become a wealthy man by selling out
Britain's spy network to France. The French take Grey for a
disgruntled ex-naval officer, blithely unaware that Grey had lost
his wife to an unlucky shot from a French cannon. Now, after many
years serving King and Country, Grey seizes the opportunity to
fight a covert war of his own. He travels to Paris, and-playing the
part of the invaluable turncoat the French believe him to
be-proceeds to infiltrate the highest levels of Napoleon's
government. If he can outwit his handlers, outmatch his French
counterparts and outrun Napoleon's secret police, Grey may just
avenge his wife's death and turn the tide of war in England's
favour. Bursting with action and intrigue, Hold Fast sends readers
headlong into an unrelenting spy thriller.
December 1803: A French invasion fleet is poised to cross the
Channel and storm the beaches of southern England. A member of
Napoleon's inner circle-disaffected by Napoleon's creeping
tyranny-contacts the British naval intelligence service in hopes of
defecting to London. His escape plan calls for a rendezvous at an
international chess tournament in Frankfurt-a rare opportunity for
him to travel outside France. Naval intelligence sends its top
man-and best chess player-Captain Thomas Grey, to orchestrate the
Frenchman's escape to England. But Grey's mission changes
dramatically when the defector demands that his pro-Napoleon
daughter come with him-expecting Grey to act not just as escort but
kidnapper. The second novel in J. H. Gelernter's already lauded
Captain Grey series, Captain Grey's Gambit continues a story that
is "smart, fast, twisty, and dangerous" (Lee Child) in a "richly
imagined early nineteenth-century world" (Richard Snow).
It's 1803. The Napoleonic Wars are raging, Britain is on her heels,
and His Majesty's Secret Service has just lost its best agent,
Thomas Grey. Deeply depressed by his wife's untimely death, Grey
resigns from the service and accepts an offer to join a lumber firm
in Boston. But when a sea battle with a privateer forces the ship
carrying him west to make port in neutral Portugal, Grey is
approached with a counteroffer: become a wealthy man by selling out
Britain's spy network to France. The French take Grey for a
disgruntled ex-naval officer, blithely unaware that Grey had lost
his wife to an unlucky shot from a French cannon. Now, after many
years serving King and Country, Grey seizes the opportunity to
fight a covert war of his own. He travels to Paris, and-playing the
part of the invaluable turncoat the French believe him to
be-proceeds to infiltrate the highest levels of Napoleon's
government. If he can outwit his handlers, outmatch his French
counterparts, and outrun Napoleon's secret police, Grey may just
avenge his wife's death and turn the tide of war in England's
favor. Bursting with action and intrigue, Hold Fast sends readers
headlong into an unrelenting spy thriller.
Vienna—June 1804. At the glittering debut of Beethoven’s Third
Symphony, a Spanish diplomat meets with Captain Thomas Grey, agent
of His Majesty’s Secret Service. In exchange for a gigantic
bribe, the Spaniard discloses Spain’s darkest secret the actual
terms of the Treaty of San Ildefonso with France. Spain’s
neutrality in Napoleon’s war on Britain is only a ruse to keep
the British navy from attacking the great treasure-armada now
gathering in South America. Spanish warships will depart
Montevideo, Uruguay, carrying 2,000 tons of gold; when the gold is
safely in Madrid, Spain will declare war on Britain and ally with
France to divide the British Empire between them. Britain’s only
hope is to sink or capture the treasure fleet, and the
responsibility of delivering that blow falls to Grey. As Jack
Aubrey would have said in such a crisis, "There is not a moment to
be lost!"
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