#BookReview Kyiv by Graham Hurley @HoZ_Books

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Welcome to today’s stop on the blog tour for Kyiv by Graham Hurley, his latest WW2 thriller set against the backdrop of Operation Barbarossa, the German code name for the invasion of Russia. My thanks to Lauren at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley.


Hurley_KYIV_HBAbout the Book

On Sunday 22nd June 1941 at 03.05, three-and-a-half million Axis troops burst into the Soviet Union along a 1,800-mile front to launch Operation Barbarossa. The southern thrust of the attack was aimed at the Caucuses and the oil fields beyond. Kyiv was the biggest city to stand in their way.

Within six weeks, the city was under siege. Surrounded by Panzers, bombed and shelled day and night, Soviet Commissar Nikita Krushchev was amongst the senior Soviet officials co-ordinating the defence. Amid his cadre of trusted personnel is British defector Bella Menzies, once with MI5, now with the NKVD, the Soviet secret police.

With the fall of the city inevitable, the Soviets plan a bloody war of terror that will extort a higher toll on the city’s inhabitants than the invaders. As the noose tightens, Bella finds herself trapped, hunted by both the Russians and the Germans.

As the local saying has it: life is dangerous – no one survives it.

Format: Hardcover (416 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 8th July 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction, Thriller

Find Kyiv on Goodreads

Purchase links
Bookshop.org
Disclosure: If you buy a book via the above link, I may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops

Hive | Amazon UK
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

I really enjoyed Last Flight to Stalingrad, the first book in Graham Hurley’s Spoils of War series. Although part of the same series, Kyiv can definitely be read as a standalone.

The setting is the city we today know as Kiev, the capital of Ukraine, and once again the author blends historical fact and fiction into the storyline. For example, Kim Philby, who it’s clear knows how to bowl a googly, makes an early appearance and Guy Burgess turns up soon afterwards. However, the two main characters, Isobel (Bella) Menzies and Tam Moncrieff are fictional.

In alternating chapters, the book charts events over the course of several weeks starting in September 1941. We follow Bella as she travels to Kiev alongside Ilya Glivenko (known as The Pianist) who is overseeing the transport of a mysterious cargo to that city from Britain. And we witness the attempts by Bella’s lover, intelligence officer Tam, to unearth more information about Bella. In the process, he uncovers evidence, in true John le Carré style, about possible moles at the heart of the British intelligence operation.

With the benefit of hindsight, the reader won’t find it hard to identify likely individuals, but for Tam it means following his instincts. There’s a terrific scene that put me in mind of the exploits of Richard Hannay, the hero of John Buchan’s adventure novels, in which Tam attempts to surreptitiously follow a man he suspects may be a traitor through the streets of London. ‘Moncrieff had spent many years stalking deer in the mountains… the subtle arts of staying upwind, of moving carefully from cover to cover, of closing on the prey’. Despite this experience, Tam finds himself outfoxed and, it becomes apparent, in danger.  Indeed, as Bella observes at one point, “The world is always more complicated than you think”.

For Bella, her time in Kyiv is one of new experiences including being hustled from one safe place to another in order to escape the attentions of Stalin’s secret police, and adopting a new identity courtesy of the enigmatic Larissa. Unfortunately, once Russian forces quit the city and are replaced by a German army of occupation, Bella experiences first-hand what the SS are capable of although, to provide balance, the author demonstrates that not every German supported the extreme acts of violence perpetrated by the Nazi regime. There is one scene in particular that, as a woman, I found hard to read and another that is shocking because of its sheer scale. It’s as Yuri, one of Bella’s Ukranian contacts, had warned: “…everything will change. Everything. Here. In the city. Everywhere. We love the Russians going, but we should be careful what we wish for.”

It’s clear the depth of research that has gone into the book, whether that’s recreating the club-like atmosphere of MI5’s Central Registry in St. Albans, the discomfort of an overnight flight aboard a Halifax, or the streets of the besieged Kyiv as German bombs rain down.

In Kyiv, the author has created an unflinching picture of the chaos, confusion and horror of war, and its long legacy – physical, emotional and psychological – for those who live through it.

In three words: Compelling, authentic, powerful

Try something similar: Hitler’s Secret (Tom Wilde #4) by Rory Clements

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Graham Hurley
Photo credit: Laura Muños

About the Author

Graham Hurley is the author of the acclaimed Faraday and Winter crime novels and an award-winning TV documentary maker. Two of the critically lauded series have been shortlisted for the Theakston’s Old Peculier Award for Best Crime
Novel. The first Wars Within novel, Finisterre, was shortlisted for the Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize.

Connect with Graham
Website | Twitter | Goodreads

#BookReview For Lord and Land (The Bernicia Chronicles Book 8) by Matthew Harffy @HoZ_Books

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Welcome to the opening day of the blog tour for Lord and Land by Matthew Harffy, the eighth book in his Bernicia Chronicles series. My thanks to Jade at Head of Zeus for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy via NetGalley.


For Lord and LandAbout the Book

Greed and ambition threaten to tear the north apart. War rages between the two kingdoms of Northumbria. Kin is pitted against kin and friend becomes foe as ambitious kings vie for supremacy.

When Beobrand travels south into East Angeln to rescue a friend, he unwittingly tilts the balance of power in the north, setting in motion events that will lead to a climactic confrontation between Oswiu of Bernicia and Oswine of Deira.

While the lord of Ubbanford is entangled in the clash of kings, his most trusted warrior, Cynan, finds himself on his own quest, called to the aid of someone he thought never to see again. Riding into the mountainous region of Rheged, Cynan faces implacable enemies who would do anything to further their own ends.

Forced to confront their pasts, and with death and betrayal at every turn, both Beobrand and Cynan have their loyalties tested to breaking point. Who will survive the battle for a united Northumbria, and who will pay the ultimate price for lord and land?

Format: Hardcover (480 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 1st July 2021 Genre: Historical Fiction

Find For Lord and Land (The Bernicia Chronicles Book 8) on Goodreads

Purchase links
Bookshop.org
Disclosure: If you buy a book via the above link, I may earn a commission from Bookshop.org, whose fees support independent bookshops

Publisher | Hive | Amazon UK
Links provided for convenience only, not as part of an affiliate programme


My Review

For Lord and Land is the fourth book I’ve read in the author’s Bernicia Chronicles series featuring the exploits of Northumbrian warrior, Beobrand. Having not read the entire series from the beginning or even read the ones I have in the right order, I think I’m well-placed to reassure readers new to the series that this latest instalment can be read perfectly well as a standalone. The author comes to the reader’s aid as well because, once the intriguing and dramatic prologue is done with, the opening chapters introduce the key characters you need to know.

Chief amongst these is, naturally, the man himself, Beobrand, whose strength, speed and skill with sword and spear has brought him the reputation as ‘one of the deadliest adversaries in all of Albion’, and as a man who rarely backs down from a fight. However, this all comes at a cost as Beobrand is frequently plagued by nightmares of the dreadful scenes of violent death he has witnessed on and off the battlefield. And then there are the members of the Black Shields, Beobrand’s warband of gesithas, whose oaths of loyalty to him Beobrand never takes for granted. Amongst them is a young man, Cuthbert, who dreams of being a great warrior but may be destined for other things.

Throughout the book, the author weaves into the unfolding story brief recaps of significant events from previous books that help to explain relationships – friendly or, more often, the opposite – between characters. And, as the reader soon learns, family ties don’t always mean closeness or affection. It’s a particular sadness for Beobrand. As he reflects, ‘All he had ever wanted was peace and a family to call his own. But however he tried, he could not cling onto love’.

Cynan, the subject of the parallel storyline, has other problems as he sets out on a quest to prevent an injustice to a woman he once knew (and who first appeared in an earlier book in the series, Warrior of Woden). Not only does Cynan put his own life in danger in doing so but he also risks the ire of Beobrand: not something to be taken lightly.

Those familiar with the author’s books will know the action comes thick and fast with battle scenes so vivid you could believe yourself part of the shieldwall and itching to respond to Beobrand’s rallying cry of “Onward, my brave gesithas!”.  It’s on these occasions, and in one-to-one combat, that Beobrand releases ‘the tethered beast of his battle-ire to do its work’. Is it Beobrand’s wyrd (fate) that he live to fight another day? Wait and see.

For those who like to know how much of their historical fiction is based on fact, you’ll be pleased to know the author provides just this information in his Historical Note. And, although it wasn’t in my digital proof copy, the book also contains a helpful map.

In For Lord and Land, Matthew Harffy has once again delivered an action-packed adventure, immersing the reader in a tumultuous period of history in which ties of friendship and loyalty are constantly tested, and treachery may lie in wait around every corner.

In three words: Action-packed, immersive, pacy

Try something similar: The Serpent King (The Whale Road Chronicles #4) by Tim Hodkinson

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Harffy_MatthewAbout the Author

Matthew Harffy grew up in Northumberland where the rugged terrain, ruined castles and rocky coastline had a huge impact on him. He now lives in Wiltshire, England, with his wife and their two daughters.

Connect with Matthew
Website | Twitter

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