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patrick oster
Author
The Man Who Fell in Love With His Wife
A man gets the terrible news that his beautiful wife of more than a decade has died in a fiery crash with a gasoline tanker truck. A week later, going through her things, he finds several fake passports, a 9-mm pistol, half a million in cash and other items that suggest his wife had a hidden life as some kind of spy. He suddenly wonders just who the heck he had married -- and sets out frantically to find out.
Reviews
Duncan MacEwan, a retired firefighter, faces the most bewildering phase of his life following his wife Deborah's sudden death in a fiery car crash. The initial wash of grief turns into shock and suspicion when Duncan finds a trove of spy gear in their attic: fake passports, a Sig Sauer pistol, wads of cash, a thumb drive, an old key, and a Bible bookmarked with a bizarre string of numbers. This spine-tingling revelation catapults him to an intriguing and paranoia-fueled investigation as Oster (author of The Sleeper List) explores themes of secrecy, betrayal, and the quest for truth, following Duncan's tortuous journey of discovering that the woman he loved may have been living a double life hidden from him.

Suspense builds as Duncan teams up with his tech-savvy friend, Tesla, who cracks open the doors to a world of international espionage and cyber warfare more intricate and dangerous than Duncan ever imagined. Oster's writing shines with its seamless integration of spy drama, geopolitical strife, and technological elements, with the inclusion of real-world cyber threats like the notorious Stuxnet virus and cameos from infamous CIA operatives Philip Agee and Aldrich Ames that lend the narrative a cinematic feel. The spy intrigue is top-notch, but Oster’s heavy lean on espionage framework and straightforward monologue sidelines the more nuanced emotional undertones of Duncan's grief and frustration. Still, it is that trade-off that ramps up the tension, as Duncan's persistent, no-holds-barred pursuit of answers leaves readers with the same gnawing question: was Deborah a hero or a villain?

Oster crafts a pulse-pounding, action-powered narrative, all while navigating the convoluted and deceptive world of espionage, the gray areas of morality, and the idea of complete transparency in marriage, making this high-stakes thriller both charged and contemplative. Readers will find themselves rooting for Duncan's clarity and closure until the end.

Takeaway: High-stakes spy thriller built on themes of marriage and betrayal.

Comparable Titles: Chris Pavone's The Expats, Olen Steinhauer's The Tourist.

Production grades
Cover: B+
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A-
Marketing copy: A-

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