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SylviaRosemond

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  1. Greetings All, I'm currently looking for a new genre of fiction to get into. I absolutely love spy thrillers, however, a majority of them have the same concept. The spy/assassin gets into doing what he/she does, because of some past tragedy. All the spy novels seem to follow the same concept, just different characters. Right now, unless it's spy history/biography, then I'm not reading it. I've tried to get into space opera/fantasy, but, I struggled with it. I always tend to find the space opera that's always military space opera. I've read a little Lost Fleet but couldn't finish it. I prefer watching space-opera/fantasy than reading it. If you can recommend a good non-military space opera that's easy to get into, doesn't take itself too seriously, and overall a fun read, then lets hear it. Sticking with the thriller, can anyone recommend an "every man" type thriller? Maybe one where the MC isn't a black ops/solider that can handle himself, maybe the average person is wrapped up in a government conspiracy.
  2. I heard about this title. It seems to be getting a movie as well. I shall put it on my list. Updated List: A Death In Sweden The Girl in the Glass: A McCabe and Savage Thriller The Lock Artist: A Novel National Security: A Jericho Quinn Thriller The Killer The Billion Dollar Spy: A True Story Of Cold War Espionage And Betrayal I Am Pilgrim
  3. Haven't read it, but it looks good. Has good reviews on Amazon. I shall add it to my list.
  4. I LOVE spy thrillers and well written psychogical thrillers are slowly growing on me. I'm compiling a list of books for my winter reading. Here is what I have so far: A Death In Sweden The Girl in the Glass: A McCabe and Savage Thriller Runner (Sam Dryden #1) If you recommend psychogical thrillers, I them to be dark and maybe the main character questions reality? Think Mr. Robot without the computer hacker part. For spy thrillers, I don't want post 9/11 thrillers. To be honest, it's becoming repetitive. I don't mind thrillers that are post Snowden, but they have to be well researched and written, I don't want authors that think computers can hack into things within a matter of minutes, and have computers be unrealistic.
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