A gripping spy thriller for fans of ROBERT HARRIS & WILLIAM BOYD from award-winning Sunday Times bestseller Rory Clements 1936. Europe is in turmoil. The Nazis have marched into the Rhinel&. In Russia, Stalin has unleashed his Great Terror. Spain has erupted in civil war. In Berlin, a young Englishwoman evades the Gestapo to deliver vital papers to a Jewish scientist. Within weeks, she is found dead, a silver syringe clutched in her fingers. In an exclusive London club, a conspiracy is launched that threatens the very heart of government. When a renowned society couple with fascist leanings are found brutally murdered, a maverick Cambridge professor is drawn into a world of espionage he knows only from history books. The deeper Thomas Wilde delves, the more he finds to link the murders with the girl with the silver syringe
- & even more worryingly to the scandal surrounding the Abdication... Set against the gathering drumbeat of war & moving from Berlin to Cambridge, from Whitehall to the Kent countryside, & from the Fens to the Aragon Front in Spain, this big canvas international thriller, like C J Sansom`s WINTER IN MADRID, marks the beginning of a brilliant new direction for Rory Clements. Praise for CORPUS ` Dramatic... pacy & assured... Well crafted, it has all the pleasures of an intriguing lead character, intricate plot & fascinating historical context` Daily Mail ` Rory Clements`s timely spy thriller set in the 1930s evokes a period of political polarisation, mistrust & simmering violence. Corpus is fast-paced & there are plenty of red herrings to keep you guessing. This is the first of a promising series & Wilde is a likeable hero` The Times ` This clever novel, rich in deceptions & intrigue, shows the reach of Stalin & Hitler into every class of British society, threatening violence on horrific scale. Corpus is a standout historical novel & spy thriller` Daily Express Praise for RORY CLEMENTS ` Enjoyable, bloody & brutish` Guardian ` Sends a shiver down your spine` Daily Mail `A colourful history lesson... exciting narrative twists` Sunday Telegraph