the increment
a novel
by
David
Ignatius
From a hidden enclave in the maze of
Tehran, an Iranian scientist who calls
himself "Dr. Ali" sends an encrypted
message to the CIA. It falls to Harry
Pappas to decide if it's for real. Dr.
Ali sends more secrets of the Iranian
bomb program to the agency, then panics.
He's being followed, but he doesn't know
who's onto him, and neither does Pappas.
The White House is no help, they're
looking for a pretext to attack Tehran.
To get his agent out, Pappas turns to a
secret British spy team known as "The
Increment," whose operatives carry the
modern version of the double-O "license
to kill." But the real story here is
infinitely more complicated than he
understands, and to get to the bottom of
it he must betray his own country.
THE INCREMENT is The Spy Who Came
In from the Cold set in Iran, with a
dose of Graham Greene's The Human Factor
to highlight the subtleties of betrayal.
Reviews
Bestseller Ignatius (Body of Lies)
explores America's escalating cold war
with Iran in a thriller sure to draw
comparisons to le Carré's The Spy Who
Came In from the Cold. When Harry
Pappas, the new CIA chief of the Iran
Operations Division, receives an
unsolicited e-mail from an alleged
Tehran scientist who calls himself "Dr.
Ali" that implies Iran has in fact
continued with its nuclear weapons
program and is "an imminent threat to
global peace," he shares the information
with his superiors only to find an
administration bent on warmongering.
Having vowed never again to play a role
in a senseless conflict that could
potentially kill thousands of innocents,
Pappas, whose only son was killed while
serving in the second Iraq War, must
somehow identify Dr. Ali, get him out of
Iran and mine his knowledge before the
U.S. blunders into another unnecessary
war. While the realistic story lines
build to a somewhat predictable ending,
this remains a page-turner of the
highest order. (May)
-Publishers Weekly
Can a heartsore and weary CIA veteran
juice up fresh, meaty intelligence from
buttoned-down Tehran? Does his trusted
Secret Intelligence Service colleague
have an inside track, and will he share?
Who really holds the cards on the
nuclear weapons story in Iran? Ignatius
(Body of Lies), the Washington
Post columnist whose knowledge of spydom
and exotic places brilliantly
illuminates his espionage novels,
imagines an Iran where a young physicist
is ready to turn his back on the regime.
Agent Harry Pappas works out a plausible
lifeline, and the adventure begins.
Ignatius floods his latest book with
highlights of technology while exploring
the dark heart of human betrayal with
menacing ambiguity. This masterful and
modern-day account of a realistic
nuclear threat has already been sold to
movie moguls and will be heavily
promoted. A sure bet for all thriller
collections.
-Barbara Conaty, Library Journal
Another taut, believable thriller from
Washington Post columnist Ignatius (Body
of Lies, 2007, etc.), who pits a
world-weary CIA agent against an
administration looking for any reason to
go to war. The thrill of fieldwork has
long left CIA veteran Harry Pappas. He's
done it all, seen it all and lost a
piece of himself in the process. Now
stationed at headquarters in D.C.,
running the agency's efforts to stay on
top of Iran, Pappas cloisters himself
with his small staff and monitors
Teheran's nuclear capabilities. It's all
pretty much business as usual, until a
message from an unexpected inside source
sets off a rush to judgment. Harry,
still reeling from a personal loss,
plays on an old relationship and takes a
desperate gamble that leads him to the
Increment, a British team that will risk
everything in this complicated story of
spies, diplomacy and nuclear
confrontations. Deploying his
considerable storytelling skills, the
author once again immerses readers in a
totally believable universe. Jargon,
geography and detail all ring true as
his meticulously crafted, tightly woven
tale moves from Washington to London and
Iran. The plot grabs everything in its
path like a snowball rolling down a
hill. As the action unfolds, Pappas
proves both a capable protagonist and a
man of principal: Rumpled and
analytical, he has no delusions about
his colleagues at the CIA and other
intelligence services, but his sense of
right and wrong compels him to keep
trying to make a difference. Ignatius
matches dead-on dialogue to an
increasingly complicated plot without
sacrificing clarity. A thinking person's
thriller with a timely take on recent
international politics.
-Kirkus Reviews
About the Author
David Ignatius, a prize-winning
columnist for the Washington Post, has
been covering the Middle East and the
CIA for more than twenty-five years. His
most recent novel is Body of Lies. He
lives in Washington, DC.
Visit
David's website