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      What could be the outcome of a marriage of convenience between unregenerate Nazis and Arab terrorists if one of the wedding gifts was a pair of Soviet nuclear devices? If the honeymoon site was an ODESSA-controlled installation in the Congo? If the best man was an American President with a weak moral spine? CIA case officer Hank Ingalls asked himself these questions before he
went missing.
      Powerful government elements want him written off. Furious, the DCI - Director of Central Intelligence orders a clandestine rescue operation. The CIA resurrects Sean Brogan, an operative forced into retirement because of direct, often violent, problem-solving techniques.
      Brogan, working with a beautiful Mossad agent, uncovers terrible truths that could destroy the moral leadership of the U.S. among the
nations of the world. With enemies threatening to destroy him after he leaves the White House, the President believes the nuclear destruction of Israel is a reasonable price to pay for self-preservation.

     
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     Finally, after the usual trials and tribulations  faced by writers, the sequel to my first novel now exists.  The novel’s working title, Wolf Trap,
exists in manuscript form only.  I’m sending out tons of query letters and, in return, am receiving
an equal tonnage of rejection letters. What to do? The only thing a writer can do and that’s to keep sending those query letters.  Somewhere in the world of literary agents, there has to be one who
is just waiting to receive my query. A suitable reward awaits anyone who can find me literary agent for Wolf Trap.
     Now, a glimpse into this new work:  Agents, double agents and terrorists populate the novel.  Running in tandem are an intense love affair, an illicit affair between the daughter of a senior U.S. government official and an Iraqi agent plus the incestuous feelings of this official towards his daughter. Bureaucratic wrangling among
intelligence barons in both Langley and Tel Aviv may be less deadly than gunfights in the African bush but they, too, predispose the success or failure of operations.
     Wolf Trap takes the reader from the corridors
of power in America through the poverty-stricken continent of Africa, to the powder keg of the
Middle East. Al Qaeda opposes U.S. policy in that area and attempts to fan a Mid-East war. Sean
and Rachel must combat these efforts.
     Hope to have good news soon.  Sean and
Rachel are practically leaping from the pages
of the manuscript.
     
About Sean Brogan:

      Sean is not the CIA officer the current pundits are writing about. Today, all we read about is the risk-averse CIA, as if all our ops types are sitting in corners of dark rooms, hugging themselves in fear they may do something to tick off a higher-up.
      Well, Sean doesn’t sit and hug himself. His boss gives him a mission. He thinks about how he will accomplish that mission then gets to work.
      Now you begin to understand why I choose
to write about Sean Brogan and the men and women like him who toil in the service of the CIA. Everything I write, I write with those brave folks
in mind.
      As you can see, To Live among Wolves is not the end of Sean's exploits. A guy like that, you don’t use once and then throw away. You keep
him as an instrument of U.S. policy. When things look blackest and you can’t find anyone else to undertake what could be a one-way mission, you call upon Sean Brogan. He wages his war against al-Qaeda even more vigorously in the sequel.

     

Copyright © 2005 by Alan Simon  All rights reserved.
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