Another sizzling espionage thriller from Gerald Seymour! This one is set in Athens, Iraq and, mostly, in England. It involves assassinations, the hunting of a killer and the attempted recruitment of a nuclear scientist by a Middle Eastern power with nuclear ambitions. Set in about 1989/1990, it features Saddam Hussein’s Iraq as the ‘rogue state’, though he is never mentioned by name, being referred to throughout as the Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council, a title so laborious to type that Mr Seymour must have saved it in ‘Quick parts’ (see the ‘Insert’ tab in MS Word) to save time and prevent himself from going nuts!
The cast of characters includes Bill Erlich, an FBI agent on a mission to avenge his friend, the assassin, ‘Colt’ (what a great name for a man who makes his living with a gun in his hand), Mossad (Israeli Intelligence) agents, an Iraqi colonel, a British scientist, Frederick Bissett, and various supporting characters who make the story all the more believable.
Seymour often uses fairly brief sentences, though not as brief as some other authors I could mention, who write (it seems) for 10 year-olds. He intersperses these with natural-sounding dialogue and short sections of deeply explanatory nuclear science, which I didn’t fully understand but they gave you the sense of the value of the ‘asset’ who was the target of the recruitment. The story builds slowly, with enough action and plot development to keep you continuously interested. Each chapter is broken down into sections, a separate one for each character. This is fine but a criticism is that it is not always obvious until you get well into the first paragraph of a new section which character he is describing. This is not a problem, it just means you may have to re-read a few lines once you’ve got your head around it.
A little bit of the action comes across as unrealistic, but artistic licence has to be permitted. I won’t give away the story but I can tell you that this is an exciting read and another in the same vein as the other greats: Le Carré, Forsyth, Deighton. I loved it.