Book Review – The Coming Fire by Greg Mosse

About the Book

First came the darkness. Then the storm. Now it’s time to face the fire.

Following a fighter jet crash in the Haitian hinterland, special agent Alex Lamarque is taken captive by a violent gang, the lone authority in this lawless territory.

His only allies are busy on the other side of the world, facing a crescendo of dangers: the AI viruses crippling the digital state; the breakdown of law and order; and some unexpected, terrifying news from a Paris observatory.

With no hope of rescue, Alex must take on his greatest challenge entirely alone. Survival will take every bit of strength he has.

Format: Paperback (192 pages) Publisher: Moonflower Books
Publication date: 17th July 2025 Genre: Thriller, Dystopian

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My Review

The Coming Fire is the final book in the trilogy which started with The Coming Darkness and continued with The Coming Storm. The book accommodates those who haven’t read the earlier books by providing some recaps of events so far. However, I would suggest for maximum enjoyment, read the first two books. They’re fast-paced and you’ll race through them as I did.

The Coming Fire is set in 2037 in a world severely affected by climate change. Some parts of the globe have become uninhabitable which has led to mass migration. Those in possession of essential resources have power, the rest do not. Technology is familiar but has developed beyond what we have today. For example, there are fully autonomous vehicles. Just as today though, countries’ economies, infrastructure and vital services rely on digital communications relayed via satellites orbiting the Earth.

Imagine if all that came to a halt. Even worse, imagine that there are some who view that prospect not as a catastrophe but as the first stage in a reset for the planet, a chance for humanity to start all over again but on a smaller scale. And perhaps scariest of all, imagine there are people actively trying to bring this about.

The Coming Storm finished on an epic cliffhanger with the reader not knowing which of the main characters (all left in perilous situations) would make it out alive. The Coming Fire picks up directly from that point. In the case of Alex Lamarque, hailed as ‘saviour of the world’ for his role in defeating The Coming Darkness conspiracy, he’s mid-flight on an out-of-control aircraft with the cabin door locked. It’s just the first of a series of seemingly impossible situations from which he must extricate himself.

Every action hero demands a suitably villainous opponent. The author delivers this in style, introducing the reader to a man without morals, utterly ruthless and willing to sacrifice the lives of millions in pursuit of his warped objective. Those he needs to help him achieve it are used, and then discarded. Ironically his use of experimental medical treatments aimed at increasing his longevity has left him a husk of a man, reliant on others for his bodily needs. Unfortunately, his evil brain is still intact and if anything his immiment demise has made him even more fanatical.

A small island off the coast of Haiti is the location for the final showdown. Can Lamarque and his colleagues save the world from the catastrophic effects of a deadly cascade of events? Actually, perhaps it’s not just the action of humans we should fear. Maybe the universe has something against us as well.

The Coming Fire is a pacy action thriller that takes you on a whirlwind journey through a nightmare future.

My thanks to Moonflower Books for my digital proof copy.

In three words: Gripping, action-packed, immersive

About the Author

Greg’s first career was in theatre as actor, director and writer. He has lived and worked in Paris, New York, Los Angeles and Madrid. Having worked as an interpreter at a variety of international institutions, in 2015 Greg returned to theatre. Since then, he has written and produced 25 plays and musicals. He took advantage of 2020’s lockdown to fulfil a long-term ambition to write a powerful thriller, and the Coming Darkness trilogy was the result.

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Book Review – The Last Apartment in Istanbul by Defne Suman

About the Book

I was writing to her, so that she would know me not as this old person whose joints creaked when he rose from a chair, but as the real the man who dreamt, deceived, envied, loved…

Pericles Drakos has lived in the exquisite Circle Building for all of his seventy-five years. From its lofty windows, he has seen his little corner of Istanbul shift and transform. But as the area has become increasingly gentrified, Pericles has retreated into its shadowy corners. And when the pandemic hits, his isolation deepens.

But when Leyla, a sparky and beautiful thirty-something moves in, Pericles is enthralled. And when he discovers Leyla is a writer, he decides to put his own pen to paper and record his own fraught that of a Greek man subjected to the politics of oppression and intimidation in twentieth-century Turkey.

Format: Hardcover (400 pages) Publisher: Apollo
Publication date: 3rd July 2025 Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

Although a Turkish citizen, Pericles Drakos is Greek Orthodox by descent. He’s lived in the same magnificent but now rather dilapidated apartment building, known as The Circle, all his life. Now the developers have moved into the area and are intent on removing the occupants, using whatever means necessary. They want to demolish the building to make way for luxury apartments. The Circle is one of the few remaining buildings left standing in this part of Istanbul, previously the hub of the Greek Orthodox community. As we learn more about Pericles’ life, the Istanbul authorities’ attempt to destroy this historic part of the city seems an echo of the Turkish government’s past attempts to expel Greek Christians from Turkey and to erase their culture by changing the names of streets and buildings.

The narrative moves between the present day, at the outset of the Covid pandemic, as Pericles and the remaining residents of The Circle attempt to resist the attempts of the developers, and his memories of past events, some very traumatic. I have to admit this aspect of Turkey’s history, the forced expulsion of Greeks, the confiscation of their property and the violence visited on the non-Muslim minority – Greeks, Armenian and Jews – was completely new to me. Pericles’ experience of feeling like an outcast in the city of his birth over the years is neatly mirrored in the present day by the quarantine restrictions that sees residents confined to the building.

Pericles is a complex character. Although he’s lived through and witnessed some terrible events, he’s not a saint. He falls in love impulsively and is deceitful. He is self-centered, often prioritising his own desires over the needs of others or his responsibilities. He owned a pharmacy but at one point also a share in a night club in the basement of The Circle run by a shady individual who dealt in drugs. Despite this, the author makes Pericles a very human figure, flawed but still possessing some good qualities.

An example of Pericles’ impulsive nature is when he sees a young woman called Leyla being shown around the vacant ground floor apartment. Instantly he becomes determined she must have the apartment, accepting a price below market value. Does she remind him of other women he has known or does he, even at seventy-five, feel a physical attraction towards her? Does he simply yearn for friendship with someone who possesses the energy of youth? Whatever, when Pericles learns Leyla is a writer he decides she is the perfect person to turn the notes he has been scribbling down about his life into a polished memoir. She teases out more detail, especially about his emotional response to the things he has witnessed. In fact, it’s unclear if what we’re reading is his original recollections or her embellished version. At one point, Pericles even comes up with the idea that Leyla should write his story as a novel, noting ‘we’d just need to change the names of the people and the streets’. But then he reflects, ‘who among those I’ve named in my story was still alive? Nobody.’

The Last Apartment in Istanbul is the well-crafted story of a man and of a city. The author describes in unsparing detail the brutal expulsions of the Greek community in the 1950s and 1960s, and the impact of the diaspora: families separated, often for years, unable – or unwilling – to return. My only reservation was the book’s ending seemed a little too neat but others may disagree.

I received a review copy courtesy of Head of Zeus via NetGalley.

In three words: Immersive, emotional, dramatic
Try something similar: The Silence of Scheherazade by Defne Suman

About the Author

Defne Suman was born in Istanbul and grew up on Buyukada Island. She gained a Masters in sociology from the Bosphorus University and then worked as a teacher in Thailand and Laos, where she studied Far Eastern philosophy and mystic disciplines. She later continued her studies in Oregon, USA and now lives in Athens with her husband. Her books include The Silence of Scheherazade and At The Breakfast Table. Her work is translated to many languages all around the world.

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