Moscow, 1963. Captain Viktor Myshkin is a loyal officer of the KGB-on the surface. Beneath, he's a double agent smuggling secrets to the West, his life measured in dead drops, microfilm, and the frost that etches ghostly maps on his windowpane.When a single photograph threatens to expose him, Viktor is thrust into a deadly game of cat-and-mouse that stretches from the frozen corridors of Lubyanka to the ice-choked waters of the Baltic, and finally to the wheat fields of a quiet Canadian prairie. His only allies: a woman who may be his lover or his handler, and the frost itself-silent, patient, and always watching.The Frost Files is a masterclass in Cold War espionage: atmospheric, lyrical, and relentlessly tense. Blending the moral ambiguity of John le Carré with the poetic realism of Graham Greene, Liam Graves delivers a spy thriller where every whisper carries weight, every border is porous, and loyalty is the most dangerous illusion of all.Perfect for fans of The Spy Who Came in from the Cold, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and The AmericansRichly detailed historical setting: Moscow, Leningrad, Helsinki, Wales, and the Canadian ArcticA haunting meditation on identity, exile, and the cost of silenceTrust the frost. It remembers for you.