<i>Charlie Johnson in the Flames</i> is that good, belonging to the same order of thrillers by writers like Graham Greene, Len Deighton and Lionel Davidson
Independent
A painfully believable novel about the human cost of war in the Balkans
- Lisa Jardine, Sunday Times
Michael Ignatieff's cast of characters... are drawn to perfection
Irish Times
Michael Ignatieff's third novel has a compressed, cinematic brilliance. You can read it in two hours, but the images it contains linger far longer than that...The texture of the novel marks this down as superior fiction
Sunday Telegraph
Charlie Johnson is a veteran war correspondent who thinks he has seen it all - until he makes one rash expedition into a war zone in the Balkans. Horrified, he watches as a woman who sheltered him is set on fire. As he tries to save her, he too is caught in the deadly fire that engulfs her. From then on, his life is consumed by the mission to find the man who did it - caught on film by his friend and cameraman Jacek- and once he is set on his journey of revenge, nothing and no one can stop him.
Drawing on his own experience of war zones, Michael Ignatieff probes into the damage that blights Charlie's life and threatens to destroy his humanity.