Nathan Tower: The Early Years
Three Novellas
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $12.99
-
Narrated by:
-
Virtual Voice
-
By:
-
JIM STOVALL
This title uses virtual voice narration
Before he became America's most resourceful spymaster, Nathan Tower had to learn the hard way.
The Nathan Tower novels follow the brilliant operatives who work for Commander Tower in 1880s Washington—Sophie Baumann, Meade Meadows, and others risking their lives in the shadow war that shapes America's rise as a global power.
But how did Nathan Tower develop the skills, judgment, and ruthless pragmatism that make him such an effective intelligence chief?
Nathan Tower: The Early Years traces his evolution from naive volunteer to master spy through three pivotal episodes:
The Road to Nashville (1862) — As a young naval lieutenant volunteering for reconnaissance at Fort Donelson, Tower nearly gets himself killed within hours. Saved by innkeeper Molly McDade and businessman Hubert Meadows, he learns his first brutal lesson: in intelligence work, cleverness gets you killed, but invisibility keeps you alive.
The Krupp Gambit (1870s) — Posted to Berlin, Tower falls into an elaborate honey trap orchestrated by German spymaster Conrad Klein. The woman he loves, the intelligence network he's built, even his sense of professional competence—all turn out to be German deceptions. The humiliation teaches him how espionage really works.
London Fog (1880s) — Now stationed in London, Tower gets his chance for revenge against Klein while rescuing a German widow from her own honey trap. But the operation's success depends on applying every lesson Klein taught him in Berlin—including the most uncomfortable ones about manipulation and betrayal.
By the time these three stories conclude, the bumbling amateur has become the calculating professional readers know from The Death of the Admiral, The Frederick Alliance, and The Deptford Confession.
These novellas reveal:
- How Tower learned to recruit and run agents
- Why he trusts Hubert Meadows above all others
- Where his professional relationship with Conrad Klein began
- What personal costs he paid for his education in espionage
- How the Civil War shaped American intelligence work
Perfect for both longtime fans wanting to understand Tower's background and new readers discovering the series, Nathan Tower: The Early Years illuminates the formative experiences that created one of historical fiction's most compelling spymasters.