About 50-60 pages into the book, I stopped reading it. I selected it based on the summary on the dust jacket, thinking it would be something like The Da Vinci Code. It was, sort of, but it was so full of explosions and shootings, the puzzle and mystery became secondary to the plot.
At the beginning of the novel, 1941, I learn that Sam Grant is a British special forces sort of soldier who was bodyguarding the king of Greece. He meets an archeologist during the German invasion of Crete. The archeologist who is also working as a British spy was trying to avoid being captured by the invaders but he died in the attempt. Sam finds him and just before the archeologist died, he gave Sam a notebook containing invaluable information, unspecified, with instructions to deliver to a certain woman.
Fast forward to 6 years later, 1947. The years have not been kind to Sam. He is in a British prison in Palestine, during the time when the Jews were fighting the British in order to establish the state of Israel. In prison, he was visited by a mysterious man, supposedly working for the British government, who offers to set him free if Sam will hand over the notebook that was entrusted to him by the dead archeologist. During the conversation, I learn that Sam has become a gun runner, selling British WW II-era cache of weapons to the Jews. Ye gods, another Sean Dillon, I was thinking. Eventually, the Jews attach the prison and sets Sam free.
He goes back to Crete and I learn that during the previous six years, the lady works for the archeologist and, with her brother, was also active in the Greek resistance movement. Eventually, they became lovers, but they broke up because the brother died and the lady blamed Sam for it. Sam, being the strong silent, type, never explained to her under what circumstances the brother died, just accepting the blame; probably because he ain't heavy and her brother is also his brother. My eyes started to glaze over at this point.
During the not so happy reunion, two hoodlums showed up, probably looking for the same notebook. Sam and the lady had to escape, so they can decipher the contents of the notebook. The mysterious man who visited Sam in prison showed up again with another renowned British scholar in tow.
Good-bye, Tom Harper. It was nice knowing you.