Code Dead: An International FBI Thriller (Ingrid Skyberg Book 9) cover

Code Dead: An International FBI Thriller (Ingrid Skyberg Book 9)

Ingrid Skyberg FBI Thrillers • Book 9

4.55 Goodreads
(324 ratings)

Why You'll Love This

When the only man who can stop a global cyberattack vanishes into a quiet English village, the threat hunting Ingrid down turns out to wear an American accent.

  • Great if you want: a globe-spanning thriller where the enemy is uncomfortably close to home
  • The experience: tight, propulsive, and clock-driven — the three-day countdown rarely lets up
  • The writing: Hudson layers institutional betrayal under the action, giving the tension real weight
  • Skip if: you haven't read the series — Ingrid's relationships carry significant backstory

About This Book

When a countdown to global digital catastrophe begins, the FBI's woman in London, Special Agent Ingrid Skyberg, has seventy-two hours to find the one person who can stop it — before someone else finds him first. The trail cuts from English countryside to shadowy international corridors of power, and when the threat turns out to be far closer to home than expected, Ingrid's mission shifts from urgent to genuinely dangerous. Hudson keeps the stakes viscerally personal even as they balloon to a worldwide scale, grounding an almost impossibly tense premise in character choices that feel real and costly.

What distinguishes this ninth installment is how confidently Hudson handles complexity without ever letting the pace flag. The plotting is precise and layered — threads tighten rather than fray — and Ingrid herself remains one of thriller fiction's more credibly flawed protagonists, someone whose instincts are sharp but whose trust is perpetually tested. Hudson writes action sequences with economy and dialogue with bite, and by this point in the series the London setting feels lived-in rather than atmospheric shorthand. Readers new to Ingrid will find it accessible; longtime fans will find it thoroughly satisfying.