Book Review: David Khara’s The Morgenstern Project
Assassins are hunting Jeremy Corbin and Jacqueline Walls and Eytan Morgenstern must save them to free himself of the physical and emotional scars of his past.
Assassins are hunting Jeremy Corbin and Jacqueline Walls and Eytan Morgenstern must save them to free himself of the physical and emotional scars of his past.
Eytan Morg must fight for the wrong side when his mentor is kidnapped and still end the actions of a mysterious group with weapons of mass destruction.
A French vineyard faces a hostile takeover by foreigners, and wine expert Benjamin Cooker audits the books only to be faced with an unexpected drowning.
A gruesome find during a major Parisian art event gets unexpected attention from Chief Nico Sirsky as he and his team chase the butcher of Paris.
I’m very conflicted on how to rate this. Part of me wants to give it a “2” as I simply do not view this as a mystery. It’s more like a story about wine and the tasting of and a visit into the history of collaborationist France during World War II. It doesn’t feel like a legitimate mystery story. And yet, I do enjoy the comparisons.
I love reading about Benjamin tasting the wines. It makes me want to visit France
A message in the tooth from a severed head in Paris has Chief Nico Sirsky digging into a supposed suicide that leads to a deep conspiracy.
Fast-paced cli-fi thriller, espionage, intrigue, economic warfare, and behind-the-scenes struggles for natural resources combine with French freelance spies and Bond-like action.