Dispatches From Moscow: Spies and Lies


BOOK ONE OF THE IRON CURTAIN CHRONICLES

A sweeping Cold War love story set against the crumbling Soviet empire

Moscow, 1986. Natalie Chester has finally achieved her dream: a posting as an American news correspondent in the USSR at the very moment history pivots. But within days of her arrival, the Chernobyl disaster erupts, her fiancé abandons her, and her bureau chief wages a relentless campaign to destroy her career.

Then she meets Anatoly Kuznetsov—a rising Soviet diplomat whose Nordic looks and reformist ideals set him apart from the gray functionaries of the Kremlin. Their attraction is immediate and dangerous. As they navigate secret meetings, KGB surveillance, and the disapproval of both governments, Natalie and Tolya become allies in a larger mission: to help end the Cold War before it ends humanity.

From the radioactive aftermath of Chernobyl to clandestine trips through the Estonian countryside, from war-torn Afghanistan to a cherry blossom proposal in Tokyo, their love affair unfolds against the decade's most dramatic events—the Reykjavik summit, Gorbachev's glasnost reforms, and the brutal suppression of Baltic independence movements. But as the Soviet empire begins its death throes, the couple discovers that the hardliners willing to kill for the old order will stop at nothing to preserve their power.

Inspired by the author's own experiences as a Moscow correspondent during perestroika, Dispatches from Moscow is a meticulously researched thriller that captures the intoxicating danger of journalism in an authoritarian state and the impossible choices faced by those who dare to imagine a better world. It's a story of professional ambition and personal sacrifice, of idealism tested by reality, and of a love that burns brightest in the shadow of the Iron Curtain's final days.

Reviews

“This fast-paced novel about an idealistic young journalist on her first foreign posting to the USSR transports us back to the waning days of Reagan's ‘Evil Empire,’ reminds us of the high stakes of the nuclear standoff during the Cold War, and introduces us to the many communities (musicians, "refuseniks," even Soviet bureaucrats) who quietly undercut the regime. As her heroine navigates this complex environment, Carol Williams skillfully paints the big picture for us: the specter of Soviet oppression, the Chernobyl disaster, the Afghan invasion, and the hope we felt when the Soviet Union collapsed. A great read by this breakout author. “
— US Ambassador Marie Yovanovitch (ret), veteran diplomat in former Soviet states and author of Lessons from the Edge
"Foreigners thought that since the Soviet Union was such a top-down society, Gorbachev could simply order bureaucrats to be creative and entrepreneurial, the KGB to put human rights first, and newspapers to write freely. Perestroika and glasnost were excellent ideas in principle, but they threatened many of the country’s top officials and institutions. Gorbachev’s tragedy was not to realize that they would fight back."
— Thomas Kent, Associated Press Moscow correspondent, editor and executive 1979-2000, author of How Russia Loses.
"Delivering truth to the world under surveillance by the office drivers and translators, your housekeeper, the janitors in your apartment building and the militiaman at your door; deafened by booming rock music so the KGB couldn’t hear what you were whispering about in the bathroom; staying vigilant to all the ways you could get arrested or expelled; blowing off steam at ex-pat parties and dancing 'til dawn; having the time of our lives covering news that changed the world. That was the correspondent's life in Moscow of the 1980s."
— Alison Smale, Associated Press Moscow correspondent and Eastern Europe bureau chief 1983-1999.

  • ISBN (Paper):978-1-965766-59-0
  • ISBN (Ebook): 978-1-965766-62-0
  • List price: $23.95
  • Category: International Political Thriller
  • Pages: 356
  • Trim size: 5.5 x 8.5
  • Publication date: April 21, 2026

CHOOSE YOUR DESIRED PURCHASE PORTAL BELOW:

AMAZON

PURCHASE

BARNES & NOBLE

PURCHASE

TEXAS A&M PRESS

PURCHASE

BOOKSHOP.ORG

PURCHASE