
Added on January 15, 2026
One of The Washington Post’s Best Thrillers of 2023 It’s the case of Amanda’s lifetime but solving it will require her to betray another spy—who just so happens to be her father in this “delicious spy novel” (People).Spying is the family business. Amanda Cole is a brilliant young CIA officer following in the footsteps of her father, who was a spy during the Cold War. It takes grit to succeed in this male-dominated world—but one hot summer day, when a Russian defector walks into her post, Amanda is given the ultimate chance to prove herself. The defector warns of the imminent assassination of a US senator. Though Amanda takes the warning seriously, her superiors don’t. Twenty-four hours later, the senator is dead. And the assassination is just beginning. Corporate blackmail, covert manipulation, corrupt oligarchs: the Kremlin has found a dangerous new way to wage war. Teaming up with Kath Frost, a fearless older woman and legendary spy, Amanda races from Rome to London, from St. Petersburg to Helsinki, unraveling the international conspiracy. But as she gets closer to the truth, a central question haunts her: Why was her father’s name written down in the senator’s notes? What does Charlie Cole really know about the Kremlin plot? The Helsinki Affair is an “propulsive, captivating spy novel,” (Good Morning America)—but this time with a refreshing female-centric twist. Perfect for fans of John le Carré and Daniel Silva, this book introduces Pitoniak as a singular new talent in the world of spy fiction.
I’m not a big fan of thrillers, but I am a fan of Anna Pitoniak. So, I was interested to see what she would do next. But I found this mildly unsatisfying. This thriller starts in Rome, when deputy station chief Amanda Cole interviews a lowly GRU operative who states a US senator is going to be assassinated in Cairo. Of course, her boss blows her off. And then the senator dies. Amanda is thrust into the investigation, trying to unravel the conspiracy behind the murder. She is promoted to station
This spy novel was a wild and fun ride. I will admit that this isn’t a typical genre for me, but I really enjoyed it. I think my favorite part is that the main character, Amanda Cole, is a female spy which I feel like is overlooked in most media about spies. The book takes place in two timelines and I will admit the switches between them were frequent and random often mid-page. I wish hat had been a little more clear, but it was a small annoyance and didn’t really detract from my enjoyment for t
I enjoyed the hell out of this. I'm stunned, really, to see the low ratings by my fellow Goodreaders. This was just so dang satisfying and well-written. What the actual, friends? In a literary world dominated by the tech-and-technique heavy Tom Clancy knock-offs and the testosterone-dripping Jack Reacher, Anna Pitoniak drops a smart, crackling character-driven thriller. Think John Le Carré meets Kate Atkinson: crispy on the outside, tender within. Amanda Cole is a career CIA agent chafing at the