This is one of the best researched books ever written. Elizabeth Tynan has done an amazing amount of research to uncover the long-hidden details of the British Atomic tests conducted at Emu Field in the vastness of the South Australian desert.
The result is a jaw-dropping saga of incompetence, miscalculations, a total disregard for Indigenous (and other) inhabitants and rampant paranoia. Then there are the lies. Lies to the Australian government, copious lies to the press, lies to the assisting Australian researchers, and a stretched version of the truth with the Americans.
This a fascinating chronicle, but not an easy read. Every page has reveals, many of them both surprising and depressing. This was a time when knowledge about atomic weapons was in its infancy and many assumptions were wrong and secrecy abounded. The Americans (who had conducted more above-ground tests) lost interest in hosting the tests or assisting when they discovered a British spy in the Pentagon. This didn't, however, stop them bidding for Australian uranium when new stocks were discovered a few years later.
Anyone interested in the Australian pre-Maralinga atomic testing should read this book.