In Bryan Christy’s thriller In the Company of Killers: A Novel, Tom Klay is an investigative reporter leading a double life as a CIA spy. But when his closest friend is murdered, his carefully constructed double life unravels – and the deeper he digs the more he realizes that everything he thought he knew about his work may have been a lie. Moderated by author Philip Mudd, CNN counterterrorism analyst.
In Conversation: On In the Company of Killers: A Novel
In Conversation: On In the Company of Killers: A Novel
Mudd, Philip
Philip Mudd is the former deputy director of the CIA’s Counterterrorist Center and the FBI’s National Security Branch. He is the author of Black Site: The CIA in the Post-9/11 World (Liveright), The Head Game: High-Efficiency Analytic Decision Making and the Art of Solving Complex Problems Quickly (Liveright) and Takedown: Inside the Hunt for Al Qaeda (University of Pennsylvania Press). His writing has appeared in Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, Foreign Policy, and The Washington Post. Mudd appears regularly as a CNN commentator and has been a contributor at NBC, Fox News, and NPR.
Christy, Bryan
Bryan Christy is the founder and former head of special investigations at National Geographic, a National Geographic Society “Rolex Explorer of the Year,” and the author of the nonfiction book The Lizard King. His international criminal investigations have been the subject of two award-winning National Geographic documentaries and have led to police raids on Vatican City, the defrocking of a pedophile monsignor, the arrest and imprisonment of the “Pablo Escobar of wildlife trafficking,” and the closing of China’s ivory market. His crime writing has been anthologized in The Best American Science and Nature Writing. Christy’s education includes Penn State, Cornell’s FALCON Program, University of Michigan Law School, Tokyo University Law School, and time at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. In his fiction debut, In the Company of Killers (G.P. Putnam’s Sons), Christy introduces Tom Klay, an investigative reporter leading a double life as a CIA spy. But while on assignment in Kenya, Klay is attacked, and his closest friend is murdered. Soon, his carefully constructed double life unravels. The agency has helped Klay before, but this time, help is slower to come, and the deeper he digs, the more he realizes that everything he thought he knew about his work may have been a lie. The New York Times called him “Immensely talented … Christy’s muscular, vivid writing and John le Carré-esque talent for thrusting us deep into unfamiliar territory ensure that what could lapse into cliché instead sounds fresh and exciting.”