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How many have to die to save one man? Each night a small jet leaves Moscow heading for a lonely outpost in the frozen Soviet North. It takes no passengers and brings none back. Intelligence shows this is neither a cargo flight nor a military flight. The British believe it's an escape route for the beleaguered General Secretary, who will use it, just moments before he's toppled from power. But to do so he must first pass through the deadly Saviour's Gate in the Kremlin itself... A taut and tense espionage thriller with a terrifying dose of reality, ideal for readers of David Young, Simon…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
How many have to die to save one man? Each night a small jet leaves Moscow heading for a lonely outpost in the frozen Soviet North. It takes no passengers and brings none back. Intelligence shows this is neither a cargo flight nor a military flight. The British believe it's an escape route for the beleaguered General Secretary, who will use it, just moments before he's toppled from power. But to do so he must first pass through the deadly Saviour's Gate in the Kremlin itself... A taut and tense espionage thriller with a terrifying dose of reality, ideal for readers of David Young, Simon Scarrow and Alex Gerlis.Praise for Saviour's Gate 'The best spy novel since The Spy Who Came in from the Cold' Stephen Coonts 'Absorbing, tense, and all too credible, this is all a prophetic thriller should be' Observer 'It is a lucid, intelligent and utterly absorbing novel about international intrigue... so brilliantly perceptive that I often caught myself holding my breath' Daily Mail
Autorenporträt
Tim Sebastian is a television journalist and novelist. He is the moderator of Conflict Zone and The New Arab Debates, broadcast on Deutsche Welle TV, Berlin, and a former BBC Correspondent in Moscow, Washington and Warsaw. He won Britain's prestigious Royal Television Society Interviewer of the Year award in 2000 and 2001. Memorable interviews with world leaders have included US Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif, South African Presidents Thabo Mbeki and FW de Klerk, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, and the last leader of the Soviet Union Mikhail Gorbachev. Tim is the author of nine previous novels including The Spy in Question which the Washington Post in 1988 said "is so modern as to undermine the very assumptions of the espionage thriller." He is also the author of two works of non-fiction.