Nucleus: a gripping spy thriller

· Bonnier Publishing Fiction Ltd.
4.2
5 reviews
Ebook
400
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

WINNER OF THE CWA HISTORICAL DAGGER 2018.

The eve of war: a secret so deadly, nothing and no one is safe

June 1939. England is partying like there's no tomorrow . . . but the good times won't last. The Nazis have invaded Czechoslovakia, in Germany Jewish persecution is widespread and, closer to home, the IRA has embarked on a bombing campaign.

Perhaps most worryingly of all, in Germany Otto Hahn has produced man-made fission and an atomic device is now possible. German High Command knows Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory is also close, and when one of the Cavendish's finest brains is murdered, Professor Tom Wilde is drawn into the investigation. In a conspiracy that stretches from Cambridge to Berlin, and from the US to Ireland, can he discover the truth before it's too late?

Praise for NUCLEUS

'Rory Clements evokes the nervous, reckless build-up to the outbreak of war in a convincingly detailed thriller' Daily Mail

'The series really hits its stride with the second volume. The murder of a physicist is one of many storylines that Clements juggles with aplomb' Daily Express

'A pulsating story that brings alive the fraught, paranoid and terrifying months when the world stood on the brink of war. Dark history with a thrilling fictional edge' Lancashire Evening Post

'Well-researched and plausible, Nucleus offers an attractive combination of history and suspense' Shots Magazine

'A pacy and dramatic historical spy thriller' Historical Novel Society

'I am already looking forward to the next Tom Wilde novel. This is a great read' Nudge Books

'Nucleus is a fascinating historical thriller which is totally convincing in its authenticity, alive with menace and teeming with characters that stay with you long after the last page is turned' Jaffa Reads Too Blog

Praise for CORPUS

'Dramatic . . . pacy and assured' Daily Mail

'Political polarisation, mistrust and simmering violence' The Times

'A standout historical novel and spy thriller' Daily Express

Praise for RORY CLEMENTS

'Enjoyable, bloody and brutish' Guardian

'Sends a shiver down your spine' Daily Mail

'A colourful history lesson . . . exciting narrative twists' Sunday Telegraph

Ratings and reviews

4.2
5 reviews
Midge Odonnell
January 17, 2018
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and for once didn't race through it to the end, I savoured it. Reading 50 or so pages and then setting it aside to let the themes percolate in the grey matter before picking it back up again an hour or two later. There is just so much going on between these covers that you run the risk of careening off the cliff edge if you don't take a step back. The telling is wonderfully evocative of the time and place without descending in to farce. It is both a very modern telling and a delicious throw back to a less technological age. The massing of heavy storm clouds of war is oppressive and you can feel the threat of war seeping in to personal and professional lives and yet the telling has a lightness of touch that shows people determined to wring every last scintilla of enjoyment from their lives before the storm breaks. Apparently, we have already met Tom Wilde in a previous novel about his exploits in Cambridge but having not read this previous outpouring is not a detriment to reading Nucleus. From the off Rory Clements allows us to inhabit the skin of his characters and this is never more apparent than with Tom Wilde and Lydia Morris. It is less easy to slip into the characters of Phillip Eaton and Frau Dr Haas but this is not due to "bad writing" but due to the twisty nature of their characters. Nobody here is who they appear to be and this is never more apparent than in the case of Henty O'Gara and Mrs Fanny Winch. A wonderful pair of side characters who very definitely deceive the reader in a completely plausible way. Even the glamorous Clarissa Lancing and her American "business partner" Milt. Hardiman are well fleshed out and not all they first appear. This is a finely honed thriller that actually keeps you guessing with espionage and counter-espionage running rampant you know about as much as out protagonist, Tom, about who he should and should not trust. Set against the peaceful River Cam we are constantly reminded that it is May Week, a time for fun and celebration and this is juxtaposed excellently against the German Threat. To start talking about the plot here would do a disservice to anyone reading this review. Simply put you need to buy this book and soak it up. With action taking us from the Quaker operated Kindertansport, to Dachau, through IRA terror attacks (as we would term them now) and on to eccentric physicists plying their trade in sleepy Cambridge it has a ton of action. Action that feels very fitting for the late 1930s. I RECEIVED A FREE COPY OF THIS NOVEL FROM READERS FIRST IN EXCHANGE FOR AN HONEST REVIEW.
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About the author

RORY CLEMENTS writes full time in a quiet corner of Norfolk, where he lives with his wife, the artist Naomi Clements Wright. He is a Sunday Times bestselling author, and twice winner of the CWA
Historical Dagger Award, for Revenger and Nucleus. Three of his other novels - Martyr, Prince and The Heretics - have been shortlisted for awards. Munich Wolf is Rory's fifteenth novel, and the first featuring Munich detective Sebastian Wolff. His books have sold over 1 million copies to date.

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