Books: The Istanbul Connection

Istanbul is the perfect backdrop for Oggy Boytchev’s taut, compulsively readable thriller, The Istanbul Connection, and the author exploits the setting.

At the heart of the story is Harry Marks, a tired young UK journalist who is drawn into a covert intelligence operation by the charismatic and enigmatic James. What begins as an unlikely friendship rapidly darkens into something more dangerous: espionage, murder, and manipulation – and money, as Harry finds himself an unwitting pawn in a rogue Anglo-American mission to seize Saddam Hussein’s wealth. Haunted, hunted, and morally compromised, Harry is ultimately forced to choose between loyalty, survival, and the truth.
What distinguishes this book is its confident pace. Boytchev has a strong command of action and plot writing, and he deploys very well. The narrative moves forward with urgency, never pausing to indulge in the kind of laboured introspection that can slow some thrillers to a crawl. Character development is kept lean and purposeful; a deliberate and refreshing editorial choice that keeps the reader firmly in the grip of events rather than psychology.
The writing itself is sharp and assured. Boytchev handles the mechanics of plot, the reveals, the reversals, the escalating jeopardy, with the ease of an experienced storyteller. The moral ambiguity at the novel’s core gives it genuine weight, elevating it above straightforward genre fare.
The Istanbul Connection is a novella that reads with the satisfaction of a full-length novel. It left me wanting more, a sequel perhaps?


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