Nemesis: An unputdownable wartime spy thriller

· Tom Wilde Book 3 · Bonnier Zaffre Ltd.
4.4
5 reviews
Ebook
400
Pages
Eligible
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About this ebook

'A masterpiece of spies, intrigue and political shenanigans' Sunday Express

Can a ruthless spy ring change the course of the war? The Sunday Times bestseller and award-winning author of Corpus returns with a gripping tale of spies, intrigue and politics set during WW2. Perfect for readers of Robert Harris, C J Sansom and Joseph Kanon.
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In a great English house, a young woman offers herself to one of the most powerful and influential figures in the land - but this is no ordinary seduction. She plans to ensure his death . . .

On holiday in France, Professor Tom Wilde discovers his brilliant student Marcus Marfield, who disappeared two years earlier to join the International Brigades in Spain, in the Le Vernet concentration camp in the foothills of the Pyrenees. Wilde secures his release just as German tanks roll into Poland.

Meanwhile, a U-boat sinks the liner Athenia in the Atlantic with many casualties, including Americans, onboard. Goebbels claims Churchill put a bomb in the ship to blame Germany and to lure America into the war.

As the various strands of an international conspiracy begin to unwind, Tom Wilde will find himself in great personal danger. For just who is Marcus Marfield? And where does his loyalty lie?

A brilliantly intelligent, gripping WW2 spy thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling author of Corpus and Hitler's Secret.
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Praise for Rory Clements:

'Political polarisation, mistrust and simmering violence' The Times

'A standout historical novel and spy thriller' Daily Express

'Enjoyable, bloody and brutish' Guardian

'A dramatic, twisty thriller' Daily Mail

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

Ratings and reviews

4.4
5 reviews
Midge Odonnell
January 27, 2019
3.5 Stars This is the third book written by Rory Clements that centres around Tom Wilde, American Professor of History at Cambridge. It picks up where Nucleus leaves off and features some familiar characters - Philip Eaton, beaten but unbowed and the divine Lydia Morris. It also has, in common with the first two books, a propensity to wax lyrical about Tom's Rudge motorcycle and it's mighty 500cc engine. Instead of being set just before World War II, this book sees the start of the conflict in 1939 and is a mixture of real people and events and the fictional. To be honest, it is the fictional that are the most interesting, especially the rather charismatic and enigmatic Marcus Marfield. The settings move from pre-war France back to Cambridge and some exploration of the surrounding fens. In comparison to Nucleus it is a little bit of a damp squib, but still a pretty strong tale. The beauty of the book is not so much it's plot - which, despite the turbulent times and the heinous actions contained within it seems to meander rather than punch through - but in the characters. Despite all their failings Tom Wilde and Philip Eaton read like real flesh and blood upon the page. Quite how a Professor of History and an MI6 Agent are wound so intrinsically is still a little bit baffling (and I've now read all 3 books in the series) but they are and it works well. Every character in the book reacts in odd ways sometimes, but completely in keeping with their character at all times. Perhaps the strongest is Lydia, undoubted bluestocking but all the better for it. There is a lot of seemingly random connection making in the book which can be hard to swallow and some of the violence is, perhaps, of the extreme variety. I did find myself having to read some sections a couple of times to figure out what on earth was going on as the language can be obfuscatory. Well worth persevering with though and has a strange ring of truth to it (as all the best Historical Fiction should). I RECEIVED A FREE COPY OF THIS BOOK 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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