When the Russians start an undeclared war to bring down the West with assassinations and disinformation attacks, the CIA reactivates a psychic agent from its old Project Stargate to fight off the attacks. Together with agents who once worked for Russia, France, and Mexico—plus a couple of youngsters—he brings the secret war to a blazing conclusion! Easton and Wu’s novel is a great example of the subgenre I call “sci-spy,” the fusion of present-day science fiction and modern spy adventure, but it’s more than that. It’s also about an exotic form of espionage that (if certain sources are to be believed) is more actual than you might expect. This is fiction, yes, but it’s rooted in some very strange and (possibly) very real things . — Allen Steele A surreal mix of Jon Ronson’s The Men Who Stare at Goats, Peter Benchley’s Q Clearance, Frank Wu’s knack for the surreal and Tom Easton’s touch for weird science, ESPionage: Regime Change is a DC thriller unlike any other. -- Analog A sublime, diverting hybrid-genre tale with chic supernatural powers and series potential. — Kirkus Reviews About the Authors: Tom Easton has been publishing science fiction and fantasy since the 1970s and spent 30 years as Analog's book columnist. His latest nonfiction book is Destinies: Issues to Shape Our Future (B Cubed Press, 2020). Frank Wu is a Hugo-winning artist and Analog favorite writer. He is also a biotech patent agent and had a small role in developing vaccines and tests for COVID-19. A sublime, diverting hybrid-genre tale with chic supernatural powers and series potential. -- Kirkus Easton and Wu make sure to have psionics make sense within the setting and history of the novel, with small acts of psychic warfare having been involved during the Cold War and War on Terror, and we get to see how having the odd telepath running around would impact life everywhere from petty crimes to international diplomacy. It's something I look forward to seeing them build upon as the series moves forward as well, as they've been terribly clever about it so far. A surreal mix of Jon Ronson's The Men Who Stare at Goats , Peter Benchley's Q Clearance , Frank Wu's knack for the surreal and Tom Easton's touch for weird science, ESPionage: Regime Change is a DC thriller unlike any other. -- Analog, January-February 2024