W.T. Tyler (pen name of Samuel J. Hamrick, Jr.) drew on a twenty-year career as a US State Department analyst in Africa and the Middle East for his novels of Cold War diplomacy and disillusionment. With a gifted ear for dialogue and an artist’s eye for painting a scene, Tyler’s novels chronicle ordinary people caught up in extraordinary events. He died in 2008 at the age of seventy-eight.
“Rogue’s March is the story of a man awakened from moral indifference by events and other people, rediscovering the value and rewards of deep commitment. Like Graham Greene and John le Carré, with whom he deserves to be compared if not ranked, Tyler is comfortable with small victories and large compromises.” —The Washington Post
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