Two brothers, a savage quarrel - and the race to find oilAlan Montague and Tom Creeley are brought up like brothers, but Alan is heir to the great estate of Whitcombe House, while Tom is merely the gardener's son. Best of friends, in the trenches of the First World War, the two men quarrel and are separated.
Best friends, now bitter enemiesThe two men survive the war, and their thoughts turn to their childhood the quest for oil. Alan seeks it in the wild mountains of the Persian Zagros. Tom emigrates to America and searches in the hills of California, the scrub of East Texas.Fortune, failure - and a final meetingAs the years pass, both men meet success or failure. And when another war dawns, the Allied forces face the greatest logistical challenge in the history of warfare - and after almost three decades apart, the two men must finally meet again.
'Stunning. A fantastic, epic, gripping story.'In the bestselling tradition of Jeffrey Archer or Ken Follett, The Sons of Adam will lock you to your seat and hold you until the very last page.
About the authorsHarry and Nuala are a husband-and-wife team who collaborated closely in writing this book. It is being republished now in celebration of their twentieth wedding anniversary.
Praise for other books by Harry Bingham‘Breathtaking’ – Seattle Times‘Riveting’ – Library Journal‘Terrific’ – Boston Globe‘Fresh and compelling’ – New York Daily News‘Superb’ – Publishers Weekly
Harry Bingham is best known for his Fiona Griffiths crime series, which has drawn rave reviews from critics, authors and readers alike.
If you've read and enjoyed one of Harry's books, make diddle-darn sure that you've signed up to the Fiona Griffiths Readers Club, by hopping right over here: http://www.harrybingham.com/lev-in-gl...
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Very good commercial novel for those that love to read Jeffrey Archer, Ken Follett, Sidney Sheldon... This is the only title by this author translated into Serbian (never translated into Croatian)... If you can get it, find his novel MONEY MAKERS, perfect!
My favorite of the three Harry Bingham books I've read to date, this is saga set from early 1900's about two brother who fall out over a misunderstanding during 1st world war and the subsequent rivalary in business that ensues (oil business). Great read and storyline. Highly recommended.
Zwei Buben kommen am gleichen Tag und Ort zur Welt und wachsen wie Brüder zusammen in Kameradschaft und Freundschaft auf. Kaum das sie erwachsen sind, werden sie im 1. Weltkrieg als Soldaten eingezogen. Durch Lügen und Mißverständnisse während des Kriegsgeschehens werden sie jahrzehntelang jeglichen Kontakt zum jeweils anderen vermeiden. Ihren gemeinsamen Jugendtraum wollen sie sich nach Ende des Krieges beide (jeweils alleine) realisieren: Nach Öl bohren. Schlußendlich sind beide in der Ölbranche äußerst erfolgreich und der 2. Weltkrieg bringt sie wieder zusammen. Sehr gut erzählter und historisch gut aufbereiteter Unterhaltungsroman - sehr kurzweilig!
I found this very interesting, slightly 'formulaic' with the two brothers theme, but nonetheless enjoyable. Very informative about its subject, moving along at a lively pace, and overall very well written, which in itself is a bonus in these days of Kindle self-publishing.
I liked it very much. In a way it reminded me of Jeffrey Archer's novel, Kane and Abel. A story about two men who were closer than twins and who became rivals in the oil industry. Starts in the late 1890s and goes through WWII. Good read.
Amazingly good book, but I felt that the ending was a bit rushed and too over the top when I think about the character and feel of the book up until then.
Very much recommend to read it though for those who would like a mini saga.
This book is a complete waste of time with an idiot plot. I hate tom, th wives are bland, cardboard cut outs and the 'plot' could be resolved in seconds. Aviod
The Sons of Adam is an ambitious and gripping novel that blends personal drama with sweeping historical change, set against the rise of the global oil industry. At its core, it is a story about friendship, class, and rivalry—but what elevates it is the scale on which these themes unfold.
The novel follows two boys—Alan, born into privilege, and Tom, the gardener’s son—who are raised side by side yet shaped by vastly different expectations. Their early bond feels genuine and deeply human, which makes the eventual fracture between them all the more powerful. When their relationship collapses in the chaos of World War I, the emotional weight carries forward into their adult lives, where they become rivals in the emerging oil economy .
What I found especially compelling is how Bingham intertwines personal conflict with global transformation. The backdrop of early oil exploration—from Persia to Texas—doesn’t just serve as scenery; it actively drives the plot and the characters’ ambitions. The industry itself becomes almost a character: volatile, high-stakes, and morally ambiguous.
Bingham’s writing is confident and immersive. He handles large spans of time and geography with ease, moving from battlefields to boardrooms without losing narrative momentum. The pacing is strong throughout, and there’s a real sense of propulsion as fortunes rise and fall. At the same time, the emotional core never gets lost—particularly in the portrayal of pride, resentment, and the lingering echoes of childhood loyalty.
One of the novel’s strengths is its exploration of class. The contrast between Alan and Tom is not simplistic; instead, it shows how deeply social structures shape opportunity, identity, and even moral choices. Their rivalry feels inevitable, yet still tragic—driven as much by circumstance as by personal flaws.
If there’s a weakness, it’s that the scale of the story can occasionally come at the expense of depth in some secondary characters, particularly the women, who sometimes feel less fully realized than their male counterparts. Still, this does little to diminish the overall impact of the narrative.
Ultimately, The Sons of Adam is a rich, sweeping novel that combines the intimacy of personal drama with the grandeur of historical change. It’s a story about how lives diverge, how ambition can both build and destroy, and how the past—especially shared beginnings—never truly lets go.
Well written I suppose. I am a fan of the authors Fiona Griffiths series, but I don't think I am a fan of a saga. It skips along too quickly for me but of course I had to keep going until the end!
Didn't give the oil industry much thought until I read this book. Interesting mixture of fact and fiction which I thought worked very well. The story is interesting and the characters had me wanting to care about them, strange for me to worry for a driller in Texas. I agree with some points made about the storyline being very linear. But I'm not sure the oil part would have worked any other way. The war part of the story didn't play a strong enough part, maybe because of the early presentation and plot hook. With more thought, maybe the author could have used flash backs to link the emotions to the past, (this is what the story is about) instead. Doing this, the author could build further the emotions driving the two men in detail with out giving out for the ending. All in all a fresh read that gets better right up to the end.
Great story at core, but I felt reading was a little slow in parts. Another book that was read over a period of a month or so, in dribs and drabs so perhaps I didn't get the full benefit of flow.