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This Story Was Coming to Life

Daniel C Davis Author Interview

The Organization: Operative Nova follows a rookie operative for a covert shadow agency who must survive three escalating missions that test her loyalty, confront her father’s mysterious death, and force her to choose between vengeance and protocol. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

Dan: The original idea for this book was a story of a woman and man out to dinner. As the story unfolded, it would become clear one of the two was there to kill the other. I loved this premise, but then I started thinking: what type of agency would send someone on this type of mission, and why? As I answered those questions, it led to more questions. Before I knew it, this story was coming to life.  

How did you develop the shadow agency at the heart of the novel?

Dan: I wanted this shadow agency to feel real without being cliché. In so many movies/stories, shadow agencies are corrupt and the protagonist must expose them. I wanted to do something different. What if there was a shadow organization that made tough decisions but actually cared about its people and tried to look out for their best interests? Even when that meant lying to them? Even when ‘protecting’ someone meant breaking their trust? These characters are trying to do impossible work with impossible choices. What you see in this book is my answer to those questions.

Do you see Bull as purely evil, or something more complex?

Dan: More complex. I see Bull as a man who followed orders for so long he became bored with it. So much so that he started to make a game of it—a game he desperately needed to win to feel alive. This is a tough world these operatives live in, and it affects them in different ways. In the eyes of his organization, Bull was effective and yielded great results. But Nova sees what they don’t: a man who’s become dangerous precisely because he’s too good at his job.

Can you tell us more about where the story and characters go after book one?

 Dan: This is the first book of a planned trilogy. Book 2, The Organization: Kill List, shifts perspective to a shadow operative named Raven—readers might remember her from Nova’s first mission. Book 3, Blood on the Throne, brings Nova and Raven together as Handler B faces the consequences of decisions he’s made over two decades. All this will unfold while they work together to solve a complex situation which puts the nation’s security at risk. After that, this world will be available for me to explore wherever the story demands. There are operatives, missions, and mysteries I’ve seeded throughout Book 1 that I can’t wait to develop. I’m thrilled to have readers along for the ride.

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They don’t exist on paper.
They don’t answer to Congress.
They were built to protect the Republic from the shadows.

Nova Dunn has spent twenty-one years carrying her father’s dog tags-and the weight of unanswered questions. Jonathan Dunn died on a classified mission when she was eight years old. At least, that’s what she was told.

Now recruited into The Organization, the same covert force that sent her father on his final operation, Nova is beginning to realize that some classified secrets cut deeper than others.
Operating under federal cover, Nova is thrust into three escalating missions that will test her loyalty, discipline, and survival. She must confront a corrupt official selling secrets to Russian intelligence. Hunt down a missing nineteen-year-old girl and dismantle the trafficking network that erased her. And face a Russian enforcer known only as Bull-a man who believes he cannot be stopped.
He’s wrong.

Perfect for fans of Jack ReacherOrphan X, and Atomic BlondeThe Organization: Operative Nova is a relentless, character-driven spy thriller featuring a new kind of hero-one forged by loss, driven by truth, and trained to operate where the light never reaches.

The Organization: Operative Nova

The Organization: Operative Nova is a spy thriller told in three mission arcs, following Nova Dunn as she graduates from training into fieldwork for a shadow agency that audits and intervenes where official channels cannot. Her first assignment is a dinner sting on a high-level government insider, Phillip Gregory Thomas, where she is ordered to assess any personal connection before deciding whether to kill him. That night becomes a test of discipline, because Thomas is tied to the operation that cost Nova her father, and Nova’s choice to follow protocol sets bigger pieces in motion. From there, the book widens into a human trafficking investigation under an FBI cover, and later a tightening endgame involving a Russian-linked network, a brutal adversary named Bull, a kidnapping that turns personal, and a late emotional reveal that reframes what Nova thought she’d already lost.

What I liked right away is how the author, Daniel C. Davis, leans into the nuts-and-bolts rhythm of tradecraft without making it feel like homework. The “name, ID, code” cadence has a steadying effect, like a metronome that keeps the story taut even when Nova’s emotions are trying to sprint ahead of her training. And when the book wants to slow down, it earns the pause with sensory clarity. A restaurant scene doesn’t just exist as a backdrop, it smells like seared meat and polished wood, and you can almost hear the clink of glass as Nova watches a man talk himself into deeper and deeper trouble. I also appreciated the mission structure. It makes the pacing clean, but it still leaves room for character beats that land because they come after pressure, not before it.

The ideas underneath the action are what stuck with me after I closed it. This is a book about competence, yes, but it’s also about restraint. Nova’s first mission is basically a moral stress test dressed up as an operational one, and the story keeps returning to that question: what does it cost to follow orders when your anger has a point. The trafficking arc gets especially heavy, and I’m glad the book treats it as ugly and urgent rather than as a sleek plot device. There’s a moment where the timeline tightens around a “shipment,” and the writing makes the risk feel immediate in a simple, stomach-dropping way. Then the later chapters pivot into something more intimate and raw, with Nova learning truths that don’t come with clean relief. The “Dear Jon” section, in particular, reads like the story finally letting Nova stop performing toughness for two minutes, and it hit me harder than some of the violence did.

Operative Nova sits firmly in the modern espionage thriller lane, closer in feel to The Bourne Identity than to slower, quieter spy fiction, but with a more emotional throughline than you might expect from a mission-of-the-week setup. If you enjoy fast, procedural scenes, morally messy assignments, and a lead who is both highly capable and visibly haunted, you’ll likely tear through it. I’d recommend it most to readers who want their spy thrillers sharp and propulsive, but who also appreciate when the story pauses long enough to let consequences bruise.

Pages: 231 | ASIN : B0GKQDFZ7N

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