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Just One Day.

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We all rely totally on a network of under sea communications cables that enable all that sustains, feeds, protects and connects our daily lives. What if - Just One Day - someone cuts some of them- is it criminal or political? The story starts on the clifftops of Cornwall and moves to life amidst the gleam and glamour of the superyachts in Monte Carlo, and continues around the Islands of Sardinia and the French Connections of Corsica. Closer inspection reveals many-if not most - of the yachts hiding their ownership behind 'Flags of Convenience.' Or as is later suggested 'Flags of Inconvenience' for those trying to solve an undersea riddle. Sharing the same seas and flags -but not the champagne lifestyle, a fleet of filthy dirty, smokey old fishing boats in need of a lot more than a lick of paint.' As ever with Harry's books- despite it's relaxed style it touches on a reality that best be addressed before fact takes over from fiction. And the clock is ticking...especially late one night in the Portugal's Lagos harbour. A modern tale with as one critic said-Peter Mayle meets James Bond..and more.

237 pages, Paperback

Published January 25, 2020

About the author

Harry Buckle

10 books148 followers
Author Harry Buckle says:" Someone, likely in a moment of over enthusiasm,
described my first thriller 'Just in Time' as being 'Peter Mayle meets Ian Fleming.' Given that it was following lunch with James Bond author Fleming that he got me my first
job as a journalist, whilst I wouldn't dare even dream to get near Fleming's concise thrilling skill, it was a very kind review. Having said that, given what happened to me later in my career path makes
me wonder if he, Fleming, made any further recommendations to other contacts of his."

'Sometimes Music is My Only Friend. The Accidental Spy.' Harry's very funny
but true story of his life prior to becoming an author, follows him from those journalistic
years as one of the '60's most read pop guru's, to starting his own music company, and
somewhat to his surprise, bringing the world a hundred or so hit records.
"You'd think being a music journalist was safe enough, but I hadn't really expected the
US Airforce to drop four H Bombs on me. Real ones, plutonium everywhere."

Then he found himself accidently and very reluctantly working with both the British
(MI6) and Russian (KGB) Secret Services, and interrogated in Moscow about what he had
been doing at No. 10 Downing Street. "It seems to us you are seeking to destabilise your
rulers with naked pictures of your then UK Prime Minister Harold Wilson. No ?"

"Having the hits, confirmed the old music industry adage, 'Happy to be Part of the
Industry of Human Happiness', with many of those worldwide hits coming from Depeche
Mode, Yazoo, Alison Moyet, Erasure and others - but discovering I was apparently working
with the Mafia was a bit of a reality check".

With some fine (and funny ) recollections of life as it then developed. The book title,
'Sometimes Music is My Only Friend', now often seems to sum up the feelings of more than
just the sixties generation.

Harry: "With 'Just In Time' indeed I do hope fans of those Peter Mayle books or Rick Stein's 'French Odyssey' TV series will enjoy the soft start to this story set in the sun-
drenched canal side villages and vineyards of South West France."

This easy read and somewhat laconic thriller gathers pace with a simple family threat
to halt all global shipping, with its 'Just in Time' freight so vital to our daily lives - our
survival even. The story moves onto the USA, New Zealand, Singapore, Shanghai, and to the
Badlands of Western Sahara just south of Morocco. Will it end in catastrophe or back in
South Western France with a celebratory cassoulet?

Harry lives in Cornwall for much of the year and - 'funds permitting', seeks 'spicy foods
and some sunshine on the old bones' for the rest of the time .

Coming soon : 'Just In Case.'Suicide no Longer Required.' :By Harry Buckle.
The British nation deploys it's finest military and scientific minds to diverting death
and destruction from our city streets which are under threat and attack from the new breed
of urban troublemaker or terrorist, and enlists a helpful solution from 'Down on the Farm.'

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