TYPORAMA
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Historical Fiction
Cover: Image by BrianScantlebury/Shutterstock
Book Design: © Shadow Mountain
Design: Sheryl Dickert Smith
Art Direction: Richard Erickson
“Outstanding novel is a harrowing account based around actual events. The author chillingly and graphically captures daily existence where the controlling political party, national security apparatus, and media work together to crush all dissent. A timely and cautionary tale. My highest recommendation.”—Historical Novel Society
ABOUT THE SLOW MARCH OF LIGHT:
Sometimes all you have is hope.
In the summer of 1961, a wall of barbed wire goes up quickly in the dead of night, officially dividing Berlin. Aware of the many whose families have been divided, Luisa joins a secret spy network, risking her life to help East Germans escape across the Berlin Wall and into the West.
Bob Inama, a soldier in the US Army, is stationed in West Germany. He’s glad to be fluent in German, especially after meeting Luisa Voigt at a church social. As they spend time together, they form a close connection. But when Bob receives classified orders to leave for undercover work immediately, he doesn’t get the chance to say goodbye.
With a fake identity, Bob’s special assignment is to be a spy embedded in East Germany, identifying possible targets for the US military. But Soviet and East German spies, the secret police, and Stasi informants are everywhere, and the danger of being caught and sent to a brutal East German prison lurks on every corner.
Best-selling author Heather B. Moore masterfully alternates the stories of Bob and Luisa, capturing the human drama unique to Cold War Germany was well as the courage and the resilience of the human spirit.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
For author interview requests, please contact Callie Hansen at chansen@shadowmountain.com
Love the cover.
ReplyDeleteSounds good.
ReplyDeleteIt does...just a bit too non-fictionish for me, though.
DeleteThanks for your comment, Linda.
I do love stories about the divided city...especially when the wall finally comes down.
ReplyDeleteEnjoy if you read it, Laurel.
Delete