The Marching Season
The Marching Season is a 1999 spy fiction novel by Daniel Silva.[1]
It is the sequel to The Mark of the Assassin by the same author.
Plot summary
Former Agent Michael Osbourne is rerecruited by the CIA when his father-in-law Douglas Cannon, the new ambassador to the Court of St. James, is sent to the United Kingdom to promote the peace process between Protestants and Catholics of Northern Ireland, which has been jeopardized by three bloody attempts to derail them. Michael must once again face the elusive and lethal KGB-trained assassin October, with whom he has unfinished business.
International titles
Portuguese: A Marcha. (The March). (2011). ISBN 9789722522731[2]
References
- ^ a b "The Marching Season". The Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
- ^ "A Marcha". In Porbase - National Bibliographic Database of portuguese libraries. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
- v
- t
- e
- The Kill Artist (2000)
- The English Assassin (2002)
- The Confessor (2003)
- A Death in Vienna (2004)
- Prince of Fire (2005)
- The Messenger (2006)
- The Secret Servant (2007)
- Moscow Rules (2008)
- The Defector (2009)
- The Rembrandt Affair (2010)
- Portrait of a Spy (2011)
- The Fallen Angel (2012)
- The English Girl (2013)
- The Heist (2014)
- The English Spy (2015)
- The Black Widow (2016)
- House of Spies (2017)
- The Other Woman (2018)
- The New Girl (2019)
- The Order (2020)
- The Cellist (2021)
- Portrait of an Unknown Woman (2022)
- The Collector (2023)
- The Mark of the Assassin (1998)
- The Marching Season (1999)
- The Unlikely Spy (1996)
This article about a spy novel of the 1990s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. See guidelines for writing about novels. Further suggestions might be found on the article's talk page. |
- v
- t
- e