Award-winning author CHRISTOPHER DICKEY, the foreign editor of The Daily Beast, is based in France. Previously he was the Paris bureau chief and Middle East editor for Newsweek. He served as Cairo bureau chief for the Washington Post and, before that, as the paper's Central America bureau chief. His books include the acclaimed memoir Summer of Deliverance as well as Securing the City, Expats, With the Contras, and two novels about espionage and terrorism.
New York Times Bestseller
New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
"Our Man in Charleston is a joy to discover. It is a perfect book
about an imperfect spy."
—Joan Didion
"Thoroughly researched and deftly crafted. [Our Man in
Charleston will] introduce people to a man who should be
better known, one who cannily fought the good fight at a fateful
moment in history."
—Wall Street Journal
"Dickey tells Bunch’s story with aplomb and a good deal of fine
wit. On one level, Dickey has written a spicy historical beach
read, chock-full of memorable characters and intrigue. But into
this page-turning entertainment, Dickey has smuggled a thoughtful
examination of the geopolitical issues of the day...splendid."
—Boston Globe
"A fascinating page-turner that takes on special relevance as South
Carolina fills our thoughts in the summer of 2015...[Dickey] brings
to life a feverish Southern city, an un-united nation of states,
and the 'lively and indiscreet, indefatigable and thoroughly
British' man in the middle. Dickey...clearly understands the dance
of diplomacy that evolves day by day as personalities and
priorities change."
—Christian Science Monitor
"A dynamite tale of international gamesmanship...Dickey’s prose is
lively and entertaining. He writes with care for the reader —
identifying and characterizing the major players in the political
drama that unfolded."
—Dallas Morning News
"One heck of a good read."
—The Charlotte Observer
"Dickey tells the story of this unsung hero with dash, clarity and
a feel for fine detail. ... Our Man in Charleston blows the dust
off this forgotten chapter in history and, remarkably, turns it
into a thriller."
—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“A good historical primer on the buildup to the Civil War and a
behind-the-scenes look at England’s concern for its own future as
the conflict unfolded.”
—Minneapolis Star Tribune
“A unique history of the War Between the States from the
perspective of Bunch and his important, and little-known, role in
the outcome of the conflict.”
—Fort Worth Star Telegram
"[Bunch is] a brilliant find…Dickey, the foreign editor of The
Daily Beast and a former longtime Newsweek correspondent, uses his
research well: in a story like this one, point of view is
everything, and Bunch’s is razor sharp."
—American Scholar
"Dickey has written a book that is as much suspense and spy
adventure as it is a history book... A story as compelling as this
one does not come around very often. With so much already written
about the Civil War, and more coming every year, originality is a
rare thing these days. The story of Robert Bunch is that and
more."
—The Carolina Chronicles
"A fascinating tale of compromise, political maneuvering, and
espionage."
—Publishers Weekly
"Dickey's comprehension of the mindset of the area, coupled with
the enlightening missives from Bunch, provides a rich background to
understanding the time period….A great book explaining the workings
of what Dickey calls an erratic, cobbled-together coalition of
ferociously independent states. It should be in the library of any
student of diplomacy, as well as Civil War buffs."
—Kirkus Reviews (starred)
"A fine examination of a superbly skilled diplomat."
—Booklist
"Britain's consul in Charleston before and during the first two
years of the Civil War was outwardly pro-Southern and earned
notoriety in the North. But in secret correspondence with the
British Foreign Office he made clear his hostility to slavery and
the Confederacy. His dispatches helped prevent British recognition
of the Confederacy. Christopher Dickey has skillfully unraveled the
threads of this story in an engrossing account of diplomatic
derring-do."
—James M. McPherson, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Battle Cry of
Freedom
"Did Robert Bunch, Her Majesty's consul in Charleston, keep Britain
out of the Confederacy's war? Drawing on Bunch's clandestine
correspondence, Christopher Dickey makes a compelling case that
this dazzlingly duplicitous, ardent anti-slaver played a key role.
A fascinating, little-known shard of vital Civil War history,
brought glitteringly alive with all the verve and panache of a
master story teller."
—Geraldine Brooks, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of March
“In his extraordinary new history Our Man in Charleston,
Christopher Dickey has written a book you can’t put down. This is a
well-researched history with the immense power and sheer element of
surprise we find in the finest spy novels. It’s like reading a book
by Graham Greene, written while he was staying at the house of John
le Carré, discussing the fate of nations over drinks. With
Charleston consul Robert Bunch, Dickey has introduced a new great
man in the great war that haunts America still. I adored this
book.”
—Pat Conroy, author of The Great Santini and South of Broad
"Our Man in Charleston is a superlative and entertaining
history of the grey area where diplomacy ends and spy craft begins.
British Consul Robert Bunch played a secret role in the
anti-slavery fight in Charleston, which would remain secret to this
day were it not for Christopher Dickey's extraordinary detective
skills."
—Amanda Foreman, author of A World on Fire and Georgiana
"Wonderfully written and researched, Our Man in Charleston is the
best espionage book I've read. I couldn't put it down."
—Robert Baer, former CIA case officer and author of See No
Evil
"Robert Bunch is an unlikely spy, but his bravery and moral
sensibility make him an intriguing hero for Christopher Dickey's
Civil War history. Dickey knows his stuff, from spying to the slave
trade, and he's a master at telling a fast-paced, gripping
yarn."
—Evan Thomas, author of John Paul Jones and The Very Best Men
"Christopher Dickey has accomplished the near-impossible—exhuming a
forgotten but irresistible character from the dustbin of Civil War
history, and bringing him back to life with painstaking research
and bravura literary flair. This irresistible book opens new
windows onto the complicated worlds of wartime diplomacy,
intelligence-gathering and outright intrigue, and the result is
fresh history and page-turning excitement."
—Harold Holzer, author of Lincoln and the Power of the Press and
winner of the 2015 Gilder Lehrman Lincoln Prize
"A long-needed study of Robert Bunch, British consul in
Charleston—a secret agent for the Crown in the Civil War era who
outwardly praised the city and its people while privately loathing
both, and who discouraged diplomatic recognition of the Confederacy
by keeping his superiors abreast of its determination to continue
importing slaves. Elegantly written, well researched, an engrossing
story."
—Howard Jones, author of Blue and Grey Diplomacy
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