"If ever a novel was ready to be made into a feature film, it is this one.... It has all the ingredients for the big screen.... You know the kind of film I mean? The ones that usually star Harrison Ford or Liam Neeson..." (Jeremy Ransome, editor, Spalding Guardian)
A former legionnaire had been working as an investigative journalist in Paris. He meets a mysterious American of Jewish and Latino descent by chance when the latter sails into a quiet fishing village nestled in a remote Andalusian bay in the far south of Spain.
The yachtsman, also a former French foreign legionnaire, explained that he had been working in private security and he tells a story that dates back to the dark days of Nazi Germany, and it at first seems to be fictitious. However, the journalist began to question what he had been told. The mystery of the violent deaths of an elderly Swiss gentleman and his two gamekeepers in a lonely house in the English Shires serves as the catalyst as they begin to expose the international political and terrorist conspiracy. The various strands of the frightening story begin to come together. What follows is a life-and-death hunt for a secret that had its birth amid the destruction of Berlin in 1945.
There are those within the spy and security services of the Middle East, Europe, and the United States who struggle to come to terms with the enormity of their theories. Others within the corridors of political power wish to prevent that secret from seeing the light of day. They will stop at nothing to reach that aim. Who are the traitors? The suspense novel was described as reminiscent of The Odessa File and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy. A former US Navy man best described the See Glass thriller as having a style which "is very Tom Clancy. Exciting story line with real-world events as a backdrop. Another Clancy trademark you have is utilizing real-world existing/former agencies and military units."
This book begs the question: "Is it fiction?"