For the Kingstons, there is no refuge from the past-no line between family and betrayal, no border between legacy and blood.
"Beckner is an utterly distinctive voice in spy fiction... capturing the complexity of personal relationships and foreign affairs."
- I.S. Berry, Edgar Award-winning author of The Peacock and the Sparrow & former CIA clandestine officer
From Michael Frost Beckner, creator of Spy Game, the Robert Redford/Brad Pitt espionage classic, comes Kaleidoscope.
"Michael Frost Beckner is the rarest of spy novelists-a beautiful and compelling writer with a mastery of tradecraft and a deep understanding of how espionage really works."
- Joe Weisberg, creator of The Americans
Recognized for capturing the mechanics of tradecraft and the human cost of secrecy, Beckner turns that authority inward with Kaleidoscope, examining loyalty and moral consequence within an American family.
"There are other families, neither happy nor mindfully sad; sanctioned to deception, these families kindle their lives with the flint of authorized deceit.
Relentlessly.
Equally.
And to completion.
With the whole of what they should repent classified and unobservable, they are unrepentant. Unredeemed.
The Kingstons of Foxtail Farm are such a family."
Kaleidoscope follows three generations of the Kingston family as their private lives become inseparable from the American intelligence state. Loyalty hardens into doctrine; secrecy becomes inheritance. Love, faith, and moral obligation are tested where truth is never clean and justice rarely survives the institution meant to protect it.
"Kaleidoscope does for the CIA what The Sopranos did for the mob."
- Michael Apted, BAFTA-winning filmmaker (Coal Miner's Daughter, The World Is Not Enough)
Family runs deeper than governments. Land carries older histories-slavery, erasure, moral compromise-and the adults who inherit that knowledge learn to survive by managing it: what is spoken, what is buried, and what must never be named, until children are raised on fairytales to conceal a world of lies made in the name of order and power.
Those decisions are not abstract.
Since the twentieth century, energy has defined power-its possession, its production, its flow. Wars are fought over it. States rise and fall without it. Beneath Langley's surface, Silas Kingston's black project-KALEIDOSCOPE-manipulates global fuel dominance to hold nations together. Older than the Agency itself, it shadows every intelligence operation. For three generations, the Kingston family has served it, paying in loyalty, future, and self.
"Michael Frost Beckner captures the essence of spies-the cat-and-mouse choreography of espionage as it is lived, not imagined."
- Tony Mendez, CIA Trailblazer & former Chief of Disguise, and Jonna Mendez, former CIA Chief of Disguise
The novel moves the way its title suggests. Scenes turn and realign across decades as memory and consequence shift. The prose is kinetic under pressure, then expansive. Meaning accumulates through motion. Espionage is rendered not just as plot or profession, but as lives of deception governed by concealment, constraint, and cost-a pattern of light and shadow with thriller velocity and the weight of American literature.
A saga of espionage, legacy, and the cost of love without truth, Kaleidoscope brings Faulknerian moral reckoning and classical ambition to the intelligence novel.
Originally published in six volumes, Kaleidoscope is presented here as a single unified novel.