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The Quest for Anna Klein: A Novel Kindle Edition
On the eve of WWII, an international plot leads to a deadly obsession: “Nobody tells a story better than Thomas H. Cook” (Michael Connelly, New York Times–bestselling author of Two Kinds of Truth).
It’s 1939 and the world is on the brink of war, but Thomas Danforth is in New York City living a fortunate life. The well-traveled son of a wealthy importer, he’s in his twenties and running the family business, looking forward to a bright future. Then, during a snowy evening walk along Gramercy Park, a friend makes a fateful request—and involves Thomas in a dangerous idea that could change the fates of millions.
Thomas is to provide access to his secluded Connecticut mansion, where a mysterious woman will receive training in firearms and explosives. Thus begins an international plot carried out by the strange and alluring Anna Klein—a plot that will ensnare Thomas in more ways than one. When it all goes wrong and Anna disappears, he will travel far from home once again, but this time, into a war-torn world that is far more dangerous, in this story by an Edgar Award–winning author known for his “piercing thrillers” (New York Daily News).
“No other suspense writer takes readers as deeply into the heart of darkness as Thomas H. Cook.” —Chicago Tribune
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Review
"Thomas Cook's work is elegant, philosophical, and literary. This book is to be treasured, and is bound to earn him new readers. Grade A" --Cleveland Plain Dealer
From the Inside Flap
From the Back Cover
Thomas Danforth has lived a fortunate life. The son of a wealthy importer, he wandered the globe in his youth, and now, in his twenties, he lives in New York City and runs the family business. It is 1939 and the world is on the brink of war, but his life is untroubled, his future assured. Then, on a snowy evening walk along Gramercy Park, a friend makes a fateful request—and involves Thomas in a dangerous idea that could change the fates of millions.
Danforth is to provide access to his secluded Connecticut mansion, where a mysterious woman will receive training in firearms and explosives. Thus begins an international plot carried out by the strange and alluring Anna Klein—a plot that will ensnare Thomas in more ways than one. When it all goes wrong and Anna disappears, his quest across a war-torn world begins …
About the Author
Thomas H. Cook was born in Fort Payne, Alabama, in 1947. He has been nominated for the Edgar Award seven times in five different categories. He received the best novel Edgar for The Chatham School Affair, the Martin Beck Award, the Herodotus Prize for best historical short story, and the Barry Award for best novel for Red Leaves, and has been nominated for numerous other awards.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Century Club, New York City, 2001
The question was never whether she would live or die, for that had been decided long ago.
Danforth had said this flatly at one point deep in our conversation, a conclusion he’d evidently come to by way of a painful journey.
It had taken time for him to reach this particular remark. As I’d learned by then, he was a man who kept to his own measured pace. After our initial greeting, for example, he’d taken an agonizingly slow sip from his scotch and offered a quiet, grandfatherly smile. “People in their clubs,” he said softly. “Isn’t that how Fitzgerald put it? People in their clubs who set down their drinks and recalled their old best dreams. I must seem that way to you. An old man with a head full of woolly memories.” His smile was like an arrow launched from a great distance. “But even old men can be dangerous.”
I’d come to New York from Washington, traveled from one stricken city to another, it seemed, a novice member of the think tank that had recently hired me. My older colleagues had manned the desks of what had once been called Soviet Studies. They’d been very assiduous in these studies. There’d hardly been a ruble spent on missiles or manure that they hadn’t recorded and scrutinized. But for all that, not one of them had foreseen the abrupt collapse of the Soviet Union, how it would simply dissolve into the liquefying fat of its own simmering corruption. That stunning failure in forecasting had shaken their confidence to the core and sent them scrambling for an explanation. They’d still been searching for it years later when the attack had come even more staggeringly out of nowhere. That had been a far graver failure to understand the enemy at our gates, and it had sharply, and quite conveniently for me, changed their focus. Now I, the youngest of their number, their latest hire, had been dispatched to interview Thomas Jefferson Danforth, a man I’d never heard of but who’d written to tell me that he had “experience” that might prove useful, as he’d put it, to “policymakers” such as myself, “especially now.” The interview was not a prospect I relished, and I knew it to be the sort of task doled out to freshman colleagues more or less as a training exercise, but it was better than standing guard at the copying machine or fetching great stacks of research materials from the bowels of various government agencies.
“I remember that line of Fitzgerald’s,” I told Danforth, just to let him know that, although a mere wisp of a boy by his lights, I was well educated, perhaps even a tad worldly. “It was about Lindbergh. How ‘people set down their glasses in country clubs,’ struck by what he’d done.”
“A solo flight across the Atlantic that reminded them of what they’d once been or had hoped to be,” Danforth added. Now his smile suddenly seemed deeply weighted, like a bet against the odds. “Youth is a country with closed borders,” he said. “All that’s valuable must be smuggled in.”
I assumed this remark was rhetorical and found it somewhat condescending, but our conversation had just begun and so I let it pass.
Danforth winced as he shifted in his chair. “Old bones,” he explained. “So, what is your mission, Mr. Crane? The grand one, I mean.”
“Our country’s good,” I answered. “Is that grand enough?”
What remained of Danforth’s smile vanished. “I was young like you.” His voice was even, his tone cautionary, as if he regarded my youth as an animal that could easily turn on me. “Clever and self-confident. It was a very good feeling, as I recall.”
Product details
- ASIN : B004X7TKW0
- Publisher : Mariner Books; Reprint edition (June 21, 2011)
- Publication date : June 21, 2011
- Language : English
- File size : 1.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 354 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,137,460 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #2,956 in Historical Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- #4,715 in Assassination Thrillers (Books)
- #4,896 in Espionage Thrillers (Kindle Store)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

THOMAS H. COOK was born in Fort Payne, Alabama, in 1947. He has been nominated for the Edgar Award seven times in five different categories. He received the best novel Edgar for The Chatham School Affair, the Martin Beck Award, the Herodotus Prize for best historical short story, and the Barry for best novel for Red Leaves, and has been nominated for numerous other awards.
Customer reviews
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2015This is the third "Quest for . . ." book I've ordered. I've sent copies to others. I would have sent mine, but I was afraid that it wouldn't get returned. My daughter-in-law "borrowed" the copy I sent to my son. typical. I've read the book twice. The second time it was a relaxing trip through the writing, total pleasure, unhurried.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2011The "Quest for Anna Klein" was written by Thomas H. Cook. The book is an espionage mystery novel with a historical setting. This is one of several books written by Cook. He received the best novel Edgar for The Chatham School Affair as well as the Martin Beck Award, the Herodotus Prize for best historical short story, and the Barry for best novel for Red Leaves.
The writing style is conversational; questions, answers and a tale are woven into alternating time periods - present and past. The prose is rich in structure and salted with moral and philosophical ideology. The setting begins in America and Europe circa 1939 when Germany and Hitler was rising to power.
The tale is about one Thomas Jefferson Danforth, son of a well to do importer, living in New York city. Primed by his best friend, Robert Clayton, the unfulfilled and callow young Danforth, gets caught up in a plot of espionage that the conspirators name "the project". As Danforth is progressively drawn in by Clayton, Clayton introduces him to Anna Klein, a spy in training. Needing a location for training Anna Klein, Clayton convinces Danforth to provide his summer house in Connecticut (Winterset) for that purpose.
As Danforth observes Anna's training he is slowly and inevitably attracted to her; finally abandoning his current life to follow her to Europe as a co-conspirator in "the project". After arriving in Europe and initially completing some surveilance 'the project' is abandoned and a different more ambitious conspiracy is hatched. Before this new plan can be implemented, a traitor exposes the conspirators. Anna Klein is captured and taken away, Danforth is released. This begins Danforth's life long quest to find Anna Klein and to reveal and kill the traitor.
The tale from here takes many twists and turns and Danforth's steadfast resolve is slowly broken by the truths he invariably discovers: truths that are sometimes stark for "he knew the question had never been whether [he] would live or die, for that had been decided long ago." Danforth's struggle to confront his lost life and find meaning in his quest is brought to the reader as the final pieces of the puzzle are exposed.
I thought the book was quite good. I imagine that the prose and style would appeal to a mature and seasoned reader as I would also imagine that a lessor student would find the reading tedious. My knowledge of events, names and places often forming a part of the novel backdrop was not polished and I felt I missed some of the historical drama the author intended. However, I felt that if you have the steadfastness to read the entire novel, you should not be disappointed. I found at least one instance where I had to go back and reread a passage as the linkage (a 100 pages or so) between a name [Kulli Demir]and the character was lost to me. There was also one mystery that seemed to leave an open question....why did Alma give Paul the neckless?
All and all I would recommend this novel be added to your reading list.
- Reviewed in the United States on July 21, 2011World War II and the resulting chaos is fertile ground for good thrillers and mysteries and The Quest for Anna Klein is one of the best. Told in Thomas Cook's intimate first person voice, Anna, caught in a war that tore up Europe, is fascinating. Her romantic rescuer tells the tale from the vantage of years later.
I've recommended it to all my reading friends
- Reviewed in the United States on August 14, 2011Thomas Danforth has spent much of his ninety-plus years seeking his own brand of vengeance. His tale begins in 1939, when he's recruited to provide cover for a fledgling American intelligence operation that will lead to the attempted assassination of a menacing tyrant named Adolf Hitler.
The younger Danforth figures to stand squarely with the good guys, but the real world of espionage seems beyond him until he meets a secretive and beautiful young spy-in-training, Anna Klein. The mystery of Anna lures Danforth to break from his pampered life and join her on the dangerous mission within Germany to kill Hitler. It's a thrilling time for Danforth, alone with the girl he believes will give him a more dangerous but fulfilling love and life. Then the attempt fails and Danforth must flee, leaving Anna behind.
Danforth must find her. Throughout the war and beyond he embarks on a rabid and marathon quest that costs him nearly all. Anna might have been a double or even triple agent, he learns, and his pursuit takes him to postwar Europe and points East, a grim survey of the tragedies of twentieth-century Europe.
As more cruel questions confront Danforth, his search descends into an obsession with extracting vengeance at all costs. People have betrayed him. Could Anna have been at the heart of it all?
The best espionage and mystery novels are not about spies and plots and murders but about conflicted souls and the sorry truths they discover about the human condition. Quest offers fine glimpses of that, though the story may stall some readers looking for a fast-paced spy tale. The framed narrative creates many switches in time, the first third can be slow going as Danforth sets up his story, and it carries waves of foreboding and foreshadowing.
Sticking with Danforth will reward the reader. The last third moves faster and approaches the quality of espionage masters Le Carré, Furst and McCarry, yet with a profound style all its own. Author Thomas H. Cook knows when it's time to unleash the raw story. He gives you no choice but to follow Danforth as he hurtles on through dark times that threaten to make him far from a savior and just another hopeless victim.
This is Cook's first go at an espionage novel. It seems a unique angle for a spy story to have Danforth plow onward like a dogged and self-appointed detective, but it's not unfamiliar territory for Cook, who has had a long and successful career writing crime and mystery novels.
The way the story's told might split some opinions, but few can deny the novel's thoughtful and compelling lesson about vengeance.
*A longer version of this review ran originally in the Noir Journal blog.*
- Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2016I will admit it took a bit longer to get into this book than it did for me to get into all of Thomas H. Cook's other novels. However, when I finally settled into it, I couldn't put it down and, as usual, I didn't want it to end.
- Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2022Excellent plot with unforgettable characters.
Top reviews from other countries
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Felix BERGERACReviewed in France on July 24, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Un voyage dans l'histoire des abominations du siècle dernier
Je n'ai pas lu d'autres livres de l'auteur mais j'ai apprécié son montage romanesque pour nous faire parcourir les souffrances que les hommes infliges aux autres, surtout aux femme et aux enfants dans ces moment de paroxysme que sont les guerres ou les génocides. Le tout au nom d'un idéal : comment éviter le pire quitte à devoir se sacrifier pour y parvenir.
C'est le destin d'Anna Klein qui choisi un engagement et une mort probable pour changer le monde et celui de Thomas Danforth qui nous raconte sa quête de toute une vie pour comprendre s'il a aimé une héroïne ou une traitresse.
A la fin de l'histoire on reste abasourdi, que nous sommes tous petit dans le grand jeu de l'Histoire. J'avoue comme d'autres lecteur l'ont laissé entendre que le passé d'Anna n'est pas facile à comprendre et que H Cook ne nous a laissé que de très petits cailloux pour retrouver Kulli Demir.
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993Reviewed in Japan on January 9, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars 大義と裏切りと愛
還暦を越えてからも毎年新作を発表しているクックであるが、2006年のThe Murmur of Stones以降の作品は以前のクックにあった何かが薄まっていたように感じられていた。もちろん、面白くないわけではないし、綿密に組み立てられたストーリーラインを追うことの楽しみは変わらない。にもかかわらず、クックを読み続けてきた自分にとっては、今までほど彼の新作に期待しなくなりつつあったのも事実であった。そのモヤモヤした不満がThe Quest for Anna Kleinで晴らされた気がする。
現在から過去を辿り、いくつもの過去の出来事が現在に引き戻されて、最後に一気にクライマックスを迎えるスタイルは変わらない。ナチス・ドイツの時代を背景に、大義と裏切りと愛というファクターが息苦しいほどの密度でからまり、ストーリーは展開していく。自らの目指す正義をひたすらに追及する主人公とそのパートナーAnna Kleinの旅は、米国に始まり、戦時の欧州へと向かう。Annaは主人公にとっても読者にとっても不思議な影を持つ女である。欧州での任務中に起こる事件は、ふたりをそれぞれの過酷な人生へと追いやっていく。Annaへの愛と疑念に囚われた主人公の探究は、ナチス第三帝国の瓦解とともには終わらない。再び欧州に渡り、Annaとの最後の再会。Annaとは誰なのか。クックの語りはむしろここから加速していく。
いつもの悲しい話だが、そのなかに浮かんでくる愛の美しさは静かな慰めと感動を呼ぶ。次作のThe Crime of Julian Wellsもまた買おうと思う。
- Robert P. BrownReviewed in Canada on August 1, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Deserved the Pulitzer
The Pulitzer Committee, in their wisdom, declined to award a prize for Fiction in 2012. They obviously failed to read The Quest For Anna Klein.
A critic once stated that Thomas H Cook was the best novelist of the 1990's and with this book he continues to live up to that reputation.
The story concerns the reminiscences of an old man in 2001 as he relates a clandestine operation in pre war Germany in 1939 that went wrong and his lifelong obsession in tracking down the causes.
Part spy thriller, part romance, part history,( I found myself Googling names in order to learn more), the story moves effortlessly along, thanks to Cook's leisurely style of writing; it's like sitting and listening to a great storyteller; totally captivating.
If you are not already a fan of Cook's you will be after reading Anna Klien.
- RebeccaReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 15, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece
I finished this book yesterday, and am still reeling - but don't be mistaken - this isn't one of those books that mercilessly pulls on your heart strings and brazenly attempts to make you fall victim. No, this is a rare literary find, a story that feels brutally honest, full of intrigue and poignancy, with layer upon layer of twists and turns you can't possibly predict. This is the first book by Thomas H Cook I have read, and I will certainly be reading many more.
The story in brief: Paul Crane, a young man working for a foreign affairs think tank, is invited by Thomas Jefferson Danforth to hear his story of WWII and its aftermath, on the premise that he may be able to provide valuable insight into the horrors of 9/11. Danforth, now in his nineties, begins his story when he was a young man in 1939, and became involved in an American espionage and sabotage `Project' in Europe.
The key person in this `project' is Anna Klein, a mysterious young woman who can speak at least nine different languages, and whose resolve and steel in the face of adversity is apparently unbreakable. Danforth finds himself increasingly falling under Anna's spell, and when suddenly their cover is blown and the pair are separated, learning Anna Klein's fate becomes Danforth's life-long obsession - and so the Quest for Anna Klein begins.
At every stage of Danforth's quest he faces both physical and psychological peril; he must question everything he thought he knew to be true about Anna, learn the horrors of the depths of human depravity and betrayal. In telling his story Danforth is brutally honest, as his quest for Anna leads him to seek the true meaning of innocence and to understand the need for revenge.
A story masterfully told, intelligent literary excellence - I recommend it to everyone.
- JellybeanReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 29, 2016
4.0 out of 5 stars Surprises aplenty!
I enjoyed this book immensely, I found it to be a real page turner! So why only 4 stars and not 5? Well, as others have commented, Cook's writing is in quite a mature style that won't appeal to everyone, and also the ending appears to cause some confusion until you re-read an earlier chapter! But don't let that put you off an otherwise worthy read.
The book twists and turns between pre- and post-war Germany, USA and USSR amongst other places, and post 9/11 USA. It also refers to the 1915 Armenian genocide, and it's here that you should note the name Kulli Demir as his name reappears at the end in a surprising way...
Danforth is the protagonist of the story. In the aftermath of 9/11 he has invited Paul Crane, a young intelligence worker, to meet with him to provide him with 'information'. The novel jumps between Danforth describing events to Crane in one chapter, and the next chapter is set 'in the moment' i.e. 1939 or whatever year that part of the story is set. I found this a bit irritating initially, but as the book progressed this style worked well.
Danforth tells Crane how, in the run up to WWII, he became involved in 'The Project'. We are not given precise details of The Project, but that doesn't really matter as the goal soon changes to a plot to assassinate Hitler. Along the way Danforth falls in love with Anna, but it appears to be unrequited love.
I don't want to spoil the plot for anyone so I won't go into details, but in brief, Danforth and Anna are separated and he spends many years searching for her and the truth about what happened. I'd suggest paying attention to even the smallest of details about the main characters in the early chapters as it will help the later chapters make sense...
This book has plenty of surprises along the way, and quite an interesting take on the classic storyline of love and betrayal. I must admit I also learned a little bit of history too! I'm now planning to read some of Cook's other novels...
One last point, for those who have queried the 'star and crescent' necklace: I believe the star and crescent was the symbol of the Ottoman Empire, and they certainly appear on modern day Turkey's national flag (white star and crescent on a red background). Though I'm not entirely sure of the relevance of Alma's giving the necklace to Crane, I suspect it has nothing to do with 9/11, and more to do with her family's history and acceptance that vengeance is futile..?