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Neutrality Act

The Consulting Agent: Neutrality Act, by Jonathan M. Bryant, is a historical noir crime and espionage novel set in Atlanta in 1939, just before the world tips fully into war. The story follows Mark Morgan, a damaged former corporate fixer turned consulting agent, as he is hired to keep watch over German delegates attending the Baptist World Alliance meeting. What begins as a protective job quickly pulls him into Nazi politics, local corruption, murder, police violence, and the uneasy question of what neutrality means when evil is standing right in front of you.

What I appreciated most about this book is how lived-in it feels. Bryant gives Atlanta texture: the heat, the class divisions, the racial lines, the clubs, the trolleys, the old buildings, the stink of streets that have not recovered from hard times. The city is not just a backdrop. It presses on Mark from every side. The noir genre works well here because Mark is bruised in all the ways a noir lead should be, but he’s not a cartoon of cynicism. He’s weary, proud, scared, impulsive, and often slower to understand people than he thinks he is. That made him interesting to follow. I did not always admire him, but I believed him.

The author also makes a smart choice by tying the mystery to real historical tension rather than treating history like decoration. The Baptist World Alliance, Nazi delegates, American isolationism, antisemitism, segregation, and the coming war all sit under the plot like a low rumble. Sometimes the book is a detective story, sometimes an espionage tale, and sometimes a character study about a man trying to decide what kind of person he still is. I liked that the title keeps echoing through the story. Neutrality is not presented as clean or noble. It starts to feel like a thin coat of paint over fear, self-interest, and exhaustion. That is where the novel has its sharpest edge.

I would recommend The Consulting Agent: Neutrality Act to readers who enjoy historical fiction with crime, espionage, and moral tension woven together. Fans of noir mysteries, prewar spy fiction, and character-driven detective stories will get the most out of it, especially if they like books that care as much about atmosphere and history as they do about plot. It’s thoughtful, gritty, and grounded, with enough danger to keep the pages moving and enough unease to linger after the last chapter.

Pages: 275 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0GHVRDKHW

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