A young girl is ritually slaughtered on a rooftop garden in Mexico. How is her murder linked to a secret society in Imperial Russia and the dramatic rescue of a white slave in India?
Totality is the sinister story of the most ancient – and most secret – religious cult still at large in the world today. A story that starts among the power-brokers of Washington and draws the reader back through history – back to the death throes of the Egyptian New Kingdom.
What really happens at the black heart of a total eclipse?
I'm not wedded to any particular genre, but where I can, I've written stories in groups...
The Arctic Trilogy books (VINTERKRIG / SOMMERKRIG / PITERAQ) are all out-and-out action adventures. They've been described as Alistair Maclean stories for the digital age — which I'm pretty OK with.
The Liberation Trilogy (CARNIVAL OF HATE / ACT OF MALICE / PURSUIT OF EVIL) are historical adventures set in the last months of the Second World War. They're rather more layered and thoughtful — but still very fast-paced.
At the moment TOTALITY stands alone. It's a complex adventure, aimed at people who really love a historical thriller. It's an accessible read — but it will have your head spinning. I'm working on the second story in the series THE RULE OF ISFET — but it's tough going because the people who love TOTALITY have very high expectations.
On a much lighter note, I've just released a children's book ORC WORLD — which is a lot of fun, in a naughty, slightly gory way.
MANDELMAN — which comes out next month, is a fantasy adventure, set in a world which is perpetually at war. I'll let you know a bit more about it nearer the time...
I'm aware this got a lot of good reviews but I'm afraid I didn't think much of it. The story wasn't anything new,main character I found irritating and just a general story with not a great deal to recommend it
A novel about an ancient cult which appears at Total Eclipse times and locations and the mysterious figure who seems to be in all Eclipse occasions. Michele is a journalist who is tracking the traces of this cult and suddenly finds herself and her friends in mortal danger. The book totally turned me off after the first few pages with its disconnected narrative in different eras of history which did not seem to converge to a coherent text. Although the background story is interesting, the book just does not convey a coherent, gripping story and as such fails to convey the main theme. Disappointing performance.
It started a bit slow and confusing but has got much more exciting as it nears the end - some interesting facts about eclipses etc and mythology surrounding them too.