About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 54. Chapters: American spy fiction writers, British spy fiction writers, Tom Clancy, Robert Ludlum, Len Deighton, Charles McCarry, Ibn-e-Safi, E. Howard Hunt, Ron Terpening, John Briley, Mazhar Kaleem, Clive Cussler, Herbert Yardley, Raymond Benson, Hayford Peirce, Ishtiaq Ahmad, George Markstein, Daniel Silva, John Gardner, Steve Pieczenik, Brad Thor, Alan Furst, Edward S. Aarons, Donald Hamilton, T.H.E. Hill, Raelynn Hillhouse, Anthony Price, Christopher Nicole, Lionel Davidson, Chuck Pfarrer, Charles Cumming, Dorothy Gilman, Michael Walsh, David Hagberg, Barry Eisler, David L. Lindsey, Olen Steinhauer, Michael Gilbert, Elleston Trevor, Safdar Shaheen, Arnaud de Borchgrave, Gerald Petievich, Manning Coles, Eric Van Lustbader, John Bingham, 7th Baron Clanmorris, Desmond Cory, Gayle Lynds, James Church, Bill S. Ballinger, Peter Townend, Will Clarke, Warren Murphy, Jack Du Brul, Joseph Kanon, A Hameed, Desmond Skirrow, James Mitchell, Richard Jessup, Alan Williams, Jim Mullaney, Craig Dirgo, Stephen Coulter, Joseph Hone, Manning O'Brine, David Wolstencroft, Thomas F. Murphy, Andrew Kaplan, Tariq Ismail Sagar, M. A. Rahat, Samuel J. Hamrick. Excerpt: Ibn-e-Safi (also spelled as Ibne Safi) (Urdu: ) was the pen name of Asrar Ahmad (Urdu: ), a best-selling and prolific fiction writer, novelist and poet of Urdu. The word Ibn-e-Safi is an Arabian expression which literally means Son of Safi, where the word Safi means chaste or righteous. He wrote from the 1940s in India, and later Pakistan after the partition of British India in 1947. His main works were the 125-book series Jasoosi Dunya (The Spy World) and the 120-book Imran Series, with a small canon of satirical works and poetry. His novels were characterized by a blend of mystery, adventure, suspense, violence, romance and comedy, achieving massive popularity acros...