Welcome to exotic Turkey, scene of many an exciting adventure-espionage novel. Here, three disparate souls will come together in a whirlwind of danger. Amberly was an English businessman. He came to Izmir, and was lured into a smuggling ring by a sultry *femme fatale*. Now his business was survival. Nur Arsian was the Chief of Police. He came to Izmir to investigate the murder of an opium dealer, but found an assassin on his trail - and evidence that led to his own father! Diana was an archaeologist. She was looking for a fat man who dealt in stolen art. He had murdered her fiance. In Izmir, she meant to murder him.
Julian Christopher Rathbone was born in 1935 in Blackheath, southeast London. His great-uncle was the actor and great Sherlock Holmes interpreter Basil Rathbone, although they never met.
The prolific author Julian Rathbone was a writer of crime stories, mysteries and thrillers who also turned his hand to the historical novel, science fiction and even horror — and much of his writing had strong political and social dimensions.
He was difficult to pigeonhole because his scope was so broad. Arguably, his experiment with different genres and thus his refusal to be typecast cost him a wider audience than he enjoyed. Just as his subject matter changed markedly over the years, so too did his readers and his publishers.
Among his more than 40 books two were shortlisted for the Booker Prize for Fiction. Both were historical novels: first King Fisher Lives, a taut adventure revolving around a guru figure, in 1976, and, secondly, Joseph, set during the Peninsular War and written in an 18th-century prose style, in 1979. But Rathbone never quite made it into the wider public consciousness. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_R...