Ultimate Popsugar Reading Challenge discussion
2017 Challenge prompts
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An espionage thriller

I am going to read Code Name Verity. I picked up a cheap kindle book earlier in the year and have been meaning to read it!




However, I've never read it, so I may chose this one.
Although I still need to read American Assassin for my family recommendation this year, so if I like it I might use the second in that series.

I love Tommy and Tuppence!


I'm starting his Century Trilogy next year as well, seems like a good way to test the waters before jumping in to the beast that is Fall of Giants.

There is a pretty popular female series - Liz Carlyle? I've never read them though.


I am going to read Code Name Verity. I picked up..."
Was it Mata Hari's Last Dance? I haven't read it but it is on my TBR. I loved Code Name Verity. I listened to it earlier this year on Audio and love it. I needed Kleenex.
I may also do The Secret Adversary as I think I already have it queued up in Overdrive for my listening while driving.

Loved the whole Lord and Lady Spy Series by Shanna Galen. Its pure fun :-)
Glad i find this book in my tbr-pile. I dont want my first choice Absolute Power read. Ím not into spy thrillers ;-)


I am going to read Code Name Verity. I picked up..."
It's an excellent read!!


The Widow File by S.G. Redling, it gets pretty violent, but it was fun. It's also only 203 pages, so those who aren't thrilled by thrillers can get it done and over real quick. :)

I'd say Girl With the Dragon Tattoo is more mystery/thriller rather than espionage. You could check out The Expats - it's kind of espionage-light.

The Day of the Jackal
Perhaps a book aimed at younger readers:
Stormbreaker
Fledgling
Independence Hall
Camp Secret - first in a middle grade spy series written by former CIA intelligence officer Melissa Boyle Mahle

I don't know anything about Etiquette and Espionage, but I will be reading Cloud and Wallfish, which is YA. I did a google search for espionage thrillers (I typically read a lot I the thriller/suspense genre and wanted something a little different) and found this one.

You are free to interpret the prompts how you wish. I would say that you could certainly use this if you wanted to. And from reading the description, I'm adding it to my to-read list! lol

I am planning to read The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax Dorothy Gilman for this prompt and just added Etiquette & Espionage to my list!


I don't know anything about Etiquette and Espionage, but I will be reading [book:Clo..."
Karen wrote: "Mandee wrote: "Would Etiquette & Espionage count? This is NOT my genre... anything in YA if that won't cut it?"
I don't know anything about Etiquette and Espionage, but I will be reading [book:Clo..."
I definitely think that would work for this prompt! Gail Carriger is really fun.

I still haven't decided what I'm going to read for this task. Since I read so many mysteries, I may just wait and see which ones turn out to be espionage thrillers.



I think I have a few Helen MacInnes books, so maybe I'll finally read one of them this year.
I'm still kicking myself for not realizing that I used to live just a few doors down the street from Eric Ambler. Man, what a missed opportunity! Alas, he was in rather frail health at the time, so probably not crazy about the idea of some random college girl from America knocking on his door.

I am going to read Code Name Verity. I picked up..."
Was it Mata Hari's Last Dance or maybe The Spy by Paulo Coelho

What a load of dreck
Mandee wrote: "Would Etiquette & Espionage count? This is NOT my genre... anything in YA if that won't cut it?"
If you're still looking for YA espionage, especially something light and fluffy, look at this series: I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have to Kill You. It's about a top secret spy school for gifted girls. Complete fluff, immensely readable. I used it for my "can read in a day" category in the 2016 challenge.
If you're still looking for YA espionage, especially something light and fluffy, look at this series: I'd Tell You I Love You, But Then I'd Have to Kill You. It's about a top secret spy school for gifted girls. Complete fluff, immensely readable. I used it for my "can read in a day" category in the 2016 challenge.



I've already read another book by the same author about the last LRR patrol of the war (August-September 1944), and it was very good. (His grandfather took part in that one, too, and had kept the field journal.) Their mission lasted over a month even though pretty much everything went wrong, including two planes crashed into the woods, the leader got sick and the whole war ENDED while they were still deep behind enemy lines. (I don't remember if the second pilot had been on leave and got called back but anyway he was drunk and complained how he had been in the arms of a woman two hours earlier and now he was in the middle of nowhere with some 20-30 men in the Karelian wilderness...) One of them had to be evacuated by plane in secret because the cease fire had already started and the men had to walk back some 200 km (?) to reach the border, so their war lasted a couple of days more.

Ah, that's awesome! This book is already on my TBR list - what luck!

I don't know anything about Etiquette and Espionage, but I will be reading Clo..."</i>
[book:Etiquette & Espionage isn't a thriller, so it depends on how strictly you want to stick to the label (and this category is really hard for me too, so I don't think I'll be very strict with it personally...)

I'm not terribly worried because my boyfriend has the original James Bond books by Ian Fleming for Kindle (my Kindle account, no less) AND a bunch of John le Carré books, including the entire George Smiley series (the series Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is part of).

It's good - but you have to pay attention! It's complicated and you do have to remember who is who and where everyone sits in the plot.
Enjoyable though.

April wrote: "I am currently reading The Drafter by Kim Harrison. It 'seems' to fit the category, (special agent on a corrupt list and she doesn't know why) but it is categorized as "romantic suspense". Am I che..."
No I think an espionage with a romance angle still counts as espionage.
No I think an espionage with a romance angle still counts as espionage.
Books mentioned in this topic
From Russia with Love (other topics)From Russia with Love (other topics)
From Russia with Love (other topics)
The Gender Game (other topics)
Code Name Verity (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Graham Greene (other topics)Laura Pauling (other topics)
Tom Wood (other topics)
Roseanna M. White (other topics)
D.S. Kane (other topics)
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What will it be for you? Are there any espionage thrillers written by women? Just asking.