Mistakenly taking a sensitive file while working on a deal for a Ukrainian company, rising young lawyer Lewis Penn finds himself racing for survival and uncovering his brother's secret life. Reprint. 30,000 first printing.
Christopher George Wakling was born in 1970. He studied English at Oxford and has worked as a farm hand, teacher and lawyer. He has written four novels: Towards the Sun, The Undertow, Beneath the Diamond Sky and On Cape Three Points. The first three were literary thrillers, published under the name Christopher Wakling, but his latest book, Towards the Sun, isn’t thrilling at all, so he’s published it as Christopher George. This name decision is a publishing thing. Some books are translated into Dutch, French, Spanish and Italian. Christopher George Wakling is the Royal Literary Fund Writing Fellow at Bristol University. From time to time he teaches creative writing for the Arvon Foundation, and writes travel journalism for The Independent. Married with two children, he lives in Bristol. - From author's website
Muy bien descrito como una persona puede ir hundiendose poco a poco sin hacer nada al respecto, la historia es muy interesante, pero no es nada relatable, ninguna persona consciente tomaria decisiones tan absurdas
On Cape Three Points is a thriller which follows Lewis Penn, a London lawyer, as he desperately tries to fix a mistake, sending him into a downward spiral.
The blurb looked great, a lawyer getting mixed up with the wrong sort, a dash across the atlantic and running from dark unknown forces. Unfortunately the story itself was big let down. It essentially, in my eyes, centred on one mistake being compunded by another and then another sending the main character into more and more desperate decisions. But all the while it felt like he was making far more of the danger than was really out there.
As a result of the decisions the main character took, i found myself disliking him more and more and really didnt care if he met an gruesome end (which would have been a better end).
So weird- the first 100 pages.. I couldn't stop reading I was so enthralled. It managed to be both exciting and somehow believable. The rest was.. boring. And it took me over a week to finish. Overall, this failed to be more than just a thriller. And I'm not a thriller-fan so it didn't much strike my fancy.
There is a point in this book when you've got to make a decision as to whether you go with it or leave it. If you go with it, you do get sucked in and the relentless flow then has got you. That's why it ended up with four stars - there is depth below the basic story rather than it being a standard thriller.