Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The History Book

Rate this book
Kathleen 'Kat' Polinski - burglar, hacker, undercover agent - is out to avenge her sister's murder. In her search for answers, she discovers an increasingly plausible threat that could destroy the world.

352 pages, Hardcover

Published August 16, 2007

1 person is currently reading
39 people want to read

About the author

Humphrey Hawksley

30 books74 followers
Humphrey is an award-winning author, podcaster and journalist whose assignments with the BBC have taken him to crises all over the world. The three books in his future history series -- Dragonstrike, Dragonfire and The Third World War -- have been praised as authentic, catastrophic scenarios which begin with a Chinese strike in the South China Sea. His Rake Ozenna espionage thriller series is set in the Arctic and High North, beginning with Man on Ice and a Russian invasion of the Alaskan island of Little Diomede. Rake is an island native and a special forces veteran with the Alaska National Guard. The late, great Nelson de Mille applauded Rake as being smart and tough, 'and we’re glad to have him on our side.' Humphrey's non-fiction work includes Democracy Kills: What’s So Good About Having The Vote, published during the Iraq civil war and Asian Waters: The Struggle over the Indo-Pacific and the Challenge to American Power which examines the impact of Chinese expansion in Asia. Humphrey hosts the bi-monthly Democracy Forum Debates. His work has appeared in most mainstream media outlets and he has been guest lecturer at universities and think tanks such as the RAND Corporation, The Center for Strategic and International Studies and MENSA Cambridge. He moderates the Democracy Forum Debates on international issues and is a host of the Goldster Magazine Show and podcast.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
4 (8%)
4 stars
11 (24%)
3 stars
16 (35%)
2 stars
10 (22%)
1 star
4 (8%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Maple.
14 reviews4 followers
September 1, 2017
It was okay. The writing style was too weird and sexist and detailed on things that didn't matter. The setting was pretty good, kind of a "Big Brother" vibe from 1984. I didn't really care for the characters. Mehhhhh
1,711 reviews89 followers
May 19, 2010
RATING: 3.5

Kat Polinski and her sister, Suzy, dealt with grief differently. Upon the death of their father in a plane crash and the subsequent suicide of their mother, they go their separate ways. Kat is an undercover agent working for Homeland Security who hacks into foreign embassies and searches their computers for secret data. Suzy has moved to London and is living under an assumed name. Kat has just survived an incursion into the Kazakh embassy in Washington, DC, which has left five people dead. She returns home to a strange message from Suzy, who is murdered shortly thereafter.

Despite the pleading of her godparents to remain in the US, Kat feels she needs to go to London and find out what happened to her sister. What she uncovers there sheds a completely different light on her view of her sister, who had been doing her own share of undercover work trying to find out what happened to their father. Kat finds herself in a world where nothing is as it seems, and it is impossible to know who to trust. At times, those who she thinks she should fear turn around and help her; at other times, they set her up and leave her to her own devices.

There's a connection to something known as "Project Peace", an initiative which is just about to be enacted by several world governments and which will control the world's energy resources while sacrificing individual civil liberties. Suzy has found some chilling evidence that indicates that a powerful scion in Russia is backing the project for her own purposes and providing false data. She's saved photographic evidence (referred to as "the history book") and managed to let Kat know how to obtain it. Does Kat have enough time to release the materials and stop the signing of the agreement?

Kat is supposed to be a female action hero; however, in almost every case, she is assisted by someone else to get the job done. I found that odd, as she rarely accomplishes anything purely by relying on her own wits. It's a little too convenient that Kat's stateside contact is able to work magic long distance, that a former lover is able to carry off some assignments that contribute to her success, and a childhood friend has a key role in pulling off the denouement. The people she meets in the UK are similarly equipped to overcome all challenges.

In addition, she faces dangerous situation after dangerous situation; indeed, the Energizer Bunny has become the Unstoppable Kat. Therein lies one of the major faults of the book, the movement from one action sequence to the next without any interludes for reflection and planning. My other main complaint with the book is that there are too many characters, and I couldn't keep the good guys and bad guys straight in my own head.

The book is set in the near future, and the state of surveillance that exists at that time is actually more scary than almost anything else in the book. Citizens are routinely subjected to iris and palm scans; checkpoints are prevalent. It's truly the era of "Big Brother is watching you". How Kat and the people that are working with her to defeat the enemy get around these obstacles is interesting in its own right.

Humphrey Hawksley is a BBC foreign correspondent and commentator on world affairs. Although I mostly enjoyed The History Book, I think that if it had been a bit more grounded in reality and less "thriller-ish" that it would have been a better book.
Profile Image for Emma.
277 reviews
November 15, 2008
This reads like a movie, a movie with lots of running and shooting and computers. I liked it. It's quick and light and easy to picture. Very undemanding, which suits me fine just now.
Profile Image for Willow.
359 reviews2 followers
Read
November 10, 2021
dnf - got this book for free outside my campus bookstore. ugh i must’ve been in a weird mood when i picked it up bc the summary doesn’t even interest me. the book is boring, i don’t care about the characters, i don’t like the writing style, and im uncomfortable by how the author portrays this female character at times.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.