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  1. Lea du Pont Carpenter Brokaw is an American writer and editor. Her debut novel, Eleven Days (2013), was well received by critics.

  2. Jan 13, 2024 · Lea Carpenter clearly knows the world of espionage well. Her books, particularly her 2018 novel, “Red, White, Blue,” are rich with the nomenclature of intelligence and undercover...

  3. Aug 9, 2013 · Through the heart of Lea Carpenter’s earnest first novel, “Eleven Days,” courses the myth of a mother and son: the sea nymph Thetis and her warlike child Achilles.

  4. Sep 25, 2024 · Wilmington native Lea Carpenter is a prolific author and screenwriter known for her captivating novels and work in film and television. Here, the New Yorker discusses her 2024 novel, “Ilium,” and how her Delaware roots inspire her creativity.

  5. Lea Carpenter is the author of Ilium (3.66 avg rating, 1762 ratings, 248 reviews, published 2024), Eleven Days (3.69 avg rating, 912 ratings, 156 reviews...

  6. Jan 16, 2024 · Ilium is the debut novel by author Lea Carpenter, a espionage thriller with the prose of literary fiction set just after the opening of the 21st century in Europe as the third act in an ongoing play of espionage is opening, and a new asset is needed to bring the play to a close.

  7. Oct 30, 2018 · Lea Carpenter’s second novel, Red, White, Blue is a love story wrapped in a novel about what it means to be a spy. It’s a story about a father and daughter, about a marriage, and about unraveling the real story of why spies do what they do.

  8. Lea Carpenter Biography. Lea Carpenter is the author of two novels, Eleven Days and Red, White, Blue. She is a lecturer at Columbia Law School and lives in New York.

  9. Jan 16, 2024 · Lea Carpenter is the author of three novels set in the worlds of espionage and national security. Her newest novel, Ilium, follows an unnamed narrator who marries into a...

  10. Jan 11, 2024 · A British spy narrates Lea Carpenter's latest novel, a work of dazzling eloquence and sensitivity. The prose demands that readers pay close attention — not because there are confusing leaps...