Books tagged: russia

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Lust, Money & Murder - Books 1, 2 & 3    by Mike Wells
Price: $4.99 USD. 86780 words. Published on January 26, 2011. .

Born in the worst suburb in Pittsburgh, Elaine Brogan is bright, beautiful and bold. When her father is falsely arrested for passing counterfeit $100 bills, Elaine fights her way into the Secret Service, determined to punish the man responsible. Join Elaine on a dangerous, romantic journey that takes her halfway around the globe and into the hands of the most ruthless counterfeiter in the world.
Don't Say A Word    by Barbara Freethy
Price: $5.99 USD. 135010 words. Published on January 29, 2011. .

Julia De Marco is planning a perfect San Francisco wedding when she comes face-to-face with a famous photograph, the startling inage of a little girl behind the iron gate of a foreign orphanage -- a girl who looks exactly like her. But Julia isn't an orphan. She isn't adopted. And she's never been out of the country. She knows who she is -- or does she?
Aboard the Unstoppable Aerostat Fenris    by Cameron Chapman
Price: $0.99 USD. 19570 words. Published on February 2, 2011. .

Aboard the Unstoppable Aerostat Fenris follows our heroes, Isabelle Feeny Hemsworth and Captain Stig Rayner on their adventures aboard an airship in an alternate steampunk Edwardian era.
The Ambassador's Lady    by David Barron
Price: $0.99 USD. 5300 words. Published by H2NH ePub  on February 3, 2011. .

High society on a flat world. A cruel Duchess and a cunning Ambassador face off at court to decide the fate of a Russian Empire, but a British seductress and a young courtier have plans of their own. When schemes collide, so do people in this intricate short story with a steampunk flavor.
Security Without Nuclear Deterrence    by Robert D. Green
Price: $9.99 USD. 103390 words. Published by Astron Media DTA on February 10, 2011. .

The nuclear-armed states cite nuclear deterrence as the primary justification for keeping nuclear weapons. A former operator of British nuclear weapons, Commander Green chronicles the history, impracticalities and dangerous contradictions of nuclear deterrence. He offers instead more credible, effective and responsible alternative strategies to deter aggression and achieve real security.
L'affaire    by Alexandre Soljenitsyne
Price: $5.99 USD. 64290 words. Published by Editions de  L'Herne  on February 14, 2011. .

" L'affaire Soljenitsyne" rassemble l'ensemble des documents officiels concernant l'exclusion de Soljenitsyne de l'union des écrivains soviétiques en 1969.
The Moratorium of Anya    by Shelley Glasow Schadowsky
Price: $9.99 USD. 102340 words. Published on February 17, 2011. .

An adoptive family is forced to abandon their eleven-year-old daughter in Ukraine. In a harrowing and true saga of sacrifice and redemption to secure Anya’s citizenship, a mother fights three governments, as guns are leveled.
Open Source    by Matthew Frick
Price: $0.99 USD. 108410 words. Published on March 4, 2011. .

Based on actual events, OPEN SOURCE is a geopolitical thriller that follows Casey Shenk, a vending route driver with an insatiable curiosity, as he uncovers the truth behind a sinister plot to shape world politics, where he quickly finds himself in the crosshairs fighting to save his own life, while preventing an even greater injustice that could plunge the world headlong into the next Great War.
Cold Burn    by Jason Loeffler
Price: $0.99 USD. 4280 words. Published on March 18, 2011. .

How does one family member's (perceived) sexual orientation influence that of another? In this instance...it's for the worse. Approximately 4,000 words.
The Commissar's Report    by Martyn Burke
Price: $4.99 USD. 111220 words. Published by Bev Editions  on March 21, 2011. .

In this Cold War satire, Dimitri, a young Kremlin spy is secretly smitten by the sirens of capitalism. When he is assigned to the Soviet Consulate in New York City, he is thrilled. But his talent for making money on Wall Street creates problems with the Kremlin. Originally published by Houghton Mifflin, it is lauded as “a wonder of intense, cinematic storytelling” by the Wall Street Journal.