A Golden Age-style thriller from the author of "The Shadow of William Quest".
The autumn of 1937 - A desperate race against time to find a deadly killer…
In 1936 the British royal family were rocked by their greatest scandal as Edward VIII gave up the throne in order to marry an American divorcee.
Many ordinary people regretted the loss of their popular king. In the dark corridors of power, not everyone was sorry…
A year later the Abdication Crisis seems forgotten and all eyes are on the Coronation that summer. In August the new King George VI will retreat to Balmoral, his remote holiday home in the Highlands of Scotland.
As the shadow of war falls across Europe, a sinister conspiracy lies deep within the British establishment.
A man lies dead in a woodland glade. An unfortunate accident or has the first shot been fired in a secret war?
Sean Miller is recalled home to take on his deadliest challenge – but where do his loyalties really lie?
In a frantic chase, from the slums and sinister alleys of London to the lonely glens of the Scottish Highlands, Miller must hunt and bring down his most dangerous opponent.
His mission - to foil the final shot that will plunge Europe into the abyss of a new Dark Age.
By the author of "Loxley - The Chronicles of Robin Hood" and "The Shadow of William Quest".
John Bainbridge is the author of the thrillers. The Shadow Of William Quest, Deadly Quest and Dark Shadow, set in the Victorian underworld of the 1850s and Balmoral Kill and Dangerous Game - Golden Age style spy thrillers set in the 1930s. John has written four historical novels in the series The Chronicles of Robin Hood: Loxley, Wolfshead, Villain and Legend. These take the legendary outlaw back to a gritty medieval reality. A countryside access campaigner, John also writes non-fiction books about walking in the British countryside, Rambling - Some Thoughts on Country Walking, The Compleat Trespasser, Footloose in Devon, Footloose with George Borrow, and a memoir, Wayfarer's Dole. He is currently writing a prequel to the William Quest novels. John's wife, Anne Bainbridge, writes historical detective fiction, the Inspector Abbs Victorian Mysteries and the 1930s-set Inspector Chance Mysteries. Anne's novels were first published under John's name.
John Bainbridge's "Balmoral Kill: A Sean Miller Adventure" reads like a Hitchcock movie; it's got moody, dark streets; a villain worthy of the name; shadowy conspirators and an ordinary man thrust into an extraordinary event. Bainbridge has captured both the tone and the feel of Great Britain in the Thirties when the UK was still an empire but only just. His narrative sweeps the reader from the mean streets of London's poorest neighborhoods to the homes of the privileged few; from the craggy hills of Scotland to the offices of the men who are trying desperately to hold the country together at a time when fascism, communism and socialism threaten to overwhelm its democratic traditions and break it apart at the seams. Sean Miller is the main character of this well-written, fast-paced novel. He is a rogue of the first water; a former Army sniper, he seems unable to stay out of a fight. He could be a Red or maybe he's an anarchist... even he isn't sure. He is a fascinating character to be sure but, to me, the most interesting one in the book is Billy Stanton - an overweight, out-of-shape King's Messenger who finds himself fighting for his very life as he first fetches and then accompanies Miller on a mission that, if successful, might just allow the country to live to fight another day. It is to Bainbridge's credit that he can take a secondary character like Stanton and portray him in such a convincing and sympathetic fashion that I kept hoping he wouldn't be killed somewhere along the line. I won't spoil it for you so if you want to know whether Stanton survives or not you're going to have to read the book. Bainbridge's prose is electric and his scene setting is so well done that you can almost smell the peat and the heather when the action shifts from London to Scotland. The plot is not all that complicated, though it seems so at first because of the way Bainbridge tells the story. It is only after you've put the book down for the final time that you realize how straightforward the plot really is and that is also a tribute to Bainbridge's writing style. All in all, a very satisfying book and one that I highly recommend.
A proper old fashioned nostalgic detective thriller, they don’t make em like this any more! John Buchan and Agatha Christie come to mind. Set between the wars this highly probable story could have quite easily been lifted from declassified top secret documents at the public records office in Kew, a daunting prospect had the perpetrators of the plot realized their intentions. John Bainbridge weaves a tale expertly mixing fact and fiction, painting a detailed backdrop that takes the reader from a nervous pre war London, to the civil war in Spain and up to the Cairngorms in Scotland with deft description. Expertly researched and drawn from his own experience as a country walker and (in his own words) a trespasser, John places you perfectly in the picture. His hero’s and villains are totally believable, the protagonists are endearing, and they will leave the reader wanting further plots and exploits to grapple with. A long read, but thoroughly enjoyable boy’s own stuff, and as far as my limited grasp of English could tell, error free, hurrah!