See Glass by Ido Graf WAS $5.99 NOW FREE LIMITED TIME OFFER!

See Glass by Ido Graf is a highly evocative and atmospheric thriller. Read it on your kindle today!

The action races between Spain, the UK, Germany, Liechtenstein, the Czech Republic and the USA. What would you do to survive? What would you do to become wildly rich? Would you even risk survival? If so then ask yourself, what would your price be?

Sometimes a person has no choice!

See Glass is part of the A. Wolf thriller series.

A man acting as a gamekeeper in the remote English Shires receives a telephone call from a frail old Swiss national. That European is scared!

This call sets off a chain of events which will inevitably reveal the grave danger which is about to envelope the world. How can Adam prevail against such odds?

See Glass gives us a very uncomfortable expose of the worlds current problems from Russia to Ukraine to the Middle East and Israel and their true source. It is listed as fiction, but is there more truth in it than we are given to believe?

If you like Nelson DeMille, Dan Brown, John Grisham, Lee Child or Frederick Forsyth then you will love this book.

Not a novel for the faint-hearted!

Go to your hot desk and buy Ido Graf‘s book NOW for FREE on Amazon!

Photo by Jingming Pan on Unsplash

The Passenger by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz

The Passenger by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz has just been released.

A long lost novel written in 1938 about Nazi Germany and the treatment of Jews has become a best-seller. The Passenger by Ulrich Alexander Boschwitz is a must read for those wishing to appreciate the horrors through a contemporary viewpoint.


The novel follows the journey of Otto Silbermann who must flee with his family from the Nazis following the increasing violence surrounding Kristallnacht.


The book, The Passenger charts his hurried escape taking train after train criss-crossing Germany in order to find a border he can cross to freedom.


This classic novel by Boschwitz gives a great sense of the tremendous fear of discovery which so many of those people suffered and the consequences that would follow if the Nazis discovered them.

Photo by Diana Polekhina on Unsplash