From the New York Times bestselling author of Washington’s Spies, the thrilling story of the Confederate spy who came to Britain to turn the tide of the Civil War—and the Union agent resolved to stop him.
In 1861, soon after the outbreak of the Civil War, two secret agents—one a Confederate, the other his Union rival—were dispatched to neutral Britain, each entrusted with a vital mission.
The South’s James Bulloch, charming and devious, was to acquire a cutting-edge clandestine fleet intended to break President Lincoln’s blockade of Confederate ports, sink Northern merchant vessels, and drown the U.S. Navy’s mightiest ships at sea. The profits from gunrunning and smuggling cotton—Dixie’s notorious “white gold”—would finance the scheme. Opposing him was Thomas Dudley, a resolute Quaker lawyer and abolitionist. He was determined to stop Bulloch by any means necessary in a spy-versus-spy game of move and countermove, gambit and sacrifice, intrigue and betrayal. If Dudley failed, Britain would ally with the South and imperil a Northern victory. The battleground was the Dickensian port of Liverpool, whose dockyards built more ships each year than the rest of the world combined, whose warehouses stored more cotton than anywhere else on earth, and whose merchant princes, said one observer, were “addicted to Southern proclivities, foreign slave trade, and domestic bribery.”
From master of historical espionage Alexander Rose, The Lion and the Fox is the astonishing, untold tale of two implacable foes and their twilight struggle for the highest stakes.
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“An entertaining chronicle of the battle of wits…Rose’s indelible character sketches and firm grasp of the industrial and political milieu of nineteenth-century Britain enrich the contest of wills between Bulloch and Dudley. This spy-versus-spy tale delights.”
— Publishers Weekly
“Intrigue lovers and Civil War buffs are in for a treat!…The shadow war between Confederate and Union agents in England…is a little-known corner of history but one that is a pleasure to explore in this author’s skilled hands.”
— Nicholas Reynolds, author of Writer, Sailor, Soldier, SpyBe the first to write a review about this audiobook!
Alexander Rose is an author whose writing has appeared in the Wall Street Journal, New York Times, and Washington Post, among others. He is a member of the United States Commission on Military History, the Society for Military History, and the Royal Historical Society, as well as a Fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts. He has worked as a consultant on several television series and magazine projects and served as a contributor to the Encyclopedia of U.S. Intelligence. He has a doctorate from Cambridge University in history. His previous books include Washington’s Spies, which was adapted into AMC’s popular show Turn.
Arthur Morey has won three AudioFile Magazine “Best Of” Awards, and his work has garnered numerous AudioFile Earphones Awards and placed him as a finalist for two Audie Awards. He has acted in a number of productions, both off Broadway in New York and off Loop in Chicago. He graduated from Harvard and did graduate work at the University of Chicago. He has won awards for his fiction and drama, worked as an editor with several book publishers, and taught literature and writing at Northwestern University. His plays and songs have been produced in New York, Chicago, and Milan, where he has also performed.