Author: | Jim Musgrave | ISBN: | 9781466161320 |
Publisher: | Jim Musgrave | Publication: | August 5, 2011 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition | Language: | English |
Author: | Jim Musgrave |
ISBN: | 9781466161320 |
Publisher: | Jim Musgrave |
Publication: | August 5, 2011 |
Imprint: | Smashwords Edition |
Language: | English |
American CIA Agent, Dr. Abby Soloman, pursues a dangerous killer and Moscow detective who are plotting to murder the president of the new Russian democracy.
Russian Wolves traces the creation of a serial killer and how one man’s desire to get his family to America causes him to use this killer as a paid assassin for the Russian Mafia. Only one person can stop them, and she can’t get her own country (the United States) to believe what she has discovered is true.
Race with CIA Agent, Abigail Soloman. as she tries to stop the execution of the newly elected President of the Russian Republics. Will Chikatilo and Boris Sukurev successfully kill the president, or will Agent Soloman find a way to stop them? The answer is ultimately revealed during the heart-stopping climax of Russian Wolves in Moscow’s famous Bolshoi Ballet Theatre—ironically—during Prekopiev’s Peter and the Wolf.
American CIA Agent, Dr. Abby Soloman, pursues a dangerous killer and Moscow detective who are plotting to murder the president of the new Russian democracy.
Russian Wolves traces the creation of a serial killer and how one man’s desire to get his family to America causes him to use this killer as a paid assassin for the Russian Mafia. Only one person can stop them, and she can’t get her own country (the United States) to believe what she has discovered is true.
Race with CIA Agent, Abigail Soloman. as she tries to stop the execution of the newly elected President of the Russian Republics. Will Chikatilo and Boris Sukurev successfully kill the president, or will Agent Soloman find a way to stop them? The answer is ultimately revealed during the heart-stopping climax of Russian Wolves in Moscow’s famous Bolshoi Ballet Theatre—ironically—during Prekopiev’s Peter and the Wolf.