

Critics everywhere fell in love with Grace Flint when she burst onto the scene in 2001. Time magazine said, "Not since Modesty Blaise has spy literature seen a heroine as determined and spunky as Flint" and the Cleveland Plain Dealer described her debut as "astonishing".
"She's brave beyond words, troubled, stubborn-she's so real, and yet so larger-than-life, that she captivates the reader and never lets go."
Publishers Weekly called the novel "Gripping, complex and highly plausible" and the reviewer for the Los Angeles Times said, "For five pages I almost stopped breathing."
FLINT was published around the world and became an international best seller. In the UK where the novel sold more than 250,000 copies, The Sunday Times said: "As you'd expect from a reporter who has worked in many of the world's troublespots, Paul Eddy's forte is the taut description of danger. From Grace's early escape from Russian counterfeiters in Miami to the grisly torture [inflicted] on her in the denouement, Flint is full of passages that won't easily be forgotten."