
Unlike most espionage tales written in the years since that classic work first saw print in 1963, however, he manages to give his characters - even the most reprehensible ones - a human side and a degree of warmth. He wonders, too, if he’ll survive this encounter.Īfter three standalone novels, Olen Steinhauer returns to the series that made him a New York Times bestseller. In The Tourist, Olen Steinhauer has composed a hugely complex successor to The Spy Who Came in from the Cold. Their conversation is soon interrupted by a new breed of Tourists intent on killing them both, forcing them to run.Īs he tells his story, Milo is joined by colleagues and enemies from his long history in the world of intelligence, and the young analyst wonders what to believe.

In Olen Steinhauer’s bestseller An American Spy, reluctant CIA agent Milo Weaver thought he had finally put “Tourists”-CIA-trained assassins-to bed.Ī decade later, Milo is hiding out in Western Sahara when a young CIA analyst arrives to question him about a series of suspicious deaths and terrorist chatter linked to him.

New York Times bestselling author Olen Steinhauer brings back Milo Weaver in The Last Tourist.
