#BookReview The Senator’s Darkest Days by Joan E. Histon @JHPFiction

The Senator's Darkest DaysAbout the Book

40AD and despite the threat of bloodshed, Senator Vivius Marcianus travels to Jerusalem to investigate the delay in erecting the Emperor’s statue in the temple. Failure is not an option.

When Vivius is wounded and imprisoned, it is left to Dorio to rescue his heavily pregnant sister and her children and set about proving Vivius’s innocence.

Format: ebook (277 pages)               Publisher: Top Hat Books (an imprint of John Hunt Publishing)
Publication date:  27th March 2020 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

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My Review

The Senator’s Darkest Days is the sequel to The Senator’s Assignment which I read in 2018. Once again the author gives us a blend of fact and fiction featuring Roman senator Vivius Marcianus. During the course of this latest novel he encounters enemies he made in the previous book, notably Pontius Pilate. Yes, that Pontius Pilate.

Vivius’s first problem is being given a seemingly impossible mission by the volatile Emperor Caligula, whose excesses are becoming more unpredictable by the day. Indeed, there are those in the Senate and beyond who look on in horror at the Emperor’s increasingly irrational behaviour and are starting to think he is not the sort of emperor that the citizens of Rome deserve.

Vivius’ second problem is the antics of his brother-in-law, Dorio. A former calvalry officer in the Roman army, Dorio was seriously wounded and has rather lost his way. As a result, he is continually getting into all kinds of scrapes – spending too many hours in inns, getting into fights and running up gambling debts.  Vivius constantly finds himself having to rescue Dorio from one embarrassing situation after another.

Finally, Vivius’s wife, Aurelia, is expecting their third child so the last thing Vivius needs is to be sent to Jerusalem, particularly as it involves a sea journey; Vivius is not a good sailor. The trip is not a success, partly on account of Dorio’s actions which result in Vivius having to escort a young Jewish woman to safety.

On his return to Rome, Vivius is a witness to dramatic events that will be familiar to those who know this period of history, have read Robert Graves’ I, Claudius or watched the TV adaptation. Unfortunately Vivius’s enemies are able to take advantage of the confused situation to seek their revenge. This time it’s Dorio who comes to the aid of his brother-in-law, displaying a surprising degree of initiative in the process.

I enjoyed the way the author once again inserted Vivius into actual historical events and populated the story with real historical figures. The setting of first century Rome, with its plots and political manoeuvrings, alongside events in the life of Vivius and his family makes for another great addition to the series.

My thanks to the author and Top Hat Books for my review copy.

In three words: Entertaining, intriguing, well-researched

Try something similar: Roman Blood (Roma Sub Rosa #1) by Steven Saylor

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Joan E Histon Author PicAbout the Author

Joan Histon has a background as a professional counsellor. She began her writing career as a ghost writer when two clients expressed an interest in telling their own dramatic stories.

After the publication of Thy Will be Done… Eventually! and Tears in the Dark, she was commissioned to write the true story of ‘The Shop on Pilgrim Street’. Having also published short stories in several national magazines, Joan’s debut novel, The Senator’s Assignment, was published by Top Hat Books in 2018. The sequel, The Senator’s Darkest Days, was released in March 2020.

As well as writing, Joan is a Methodist local preacher, a gifted story-teller, spiritual director, mother and a reluctant gardener. She lives in Hexham, Northumberland with her husband, Colin.

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#BookReview The Unfortunate Englishman (Joe Wilderness #2) by John Lawton @groveatlantic

The Unfortunate EnglishmanAbout the Book

Berlin, 1963. East End-Londoner turned spy Joe Wilderness has had better days. He is sitting in a West Berlin jail, arrested for shooting someone he thought was about to kill him. His old boss, Lieutenant Burne-Jones of MI6, comes to Berlin to free him, but only under the condition that he rejoin British Intelligence. The knowledge that Wilderness gained of Berlin’s underworld while working the black market just after World War II will prove useful to Queen and country now that the city has become the epicenter of the Cold War, dividing the world in two with its wall.

On the other side of the Iron Curtain, another MI6 man, Geoffrey Masefield, is ruing the day he first agreed to be a spy. In the beginning, it had all seemed so simple, so glamorous: the international travel, the top secret files, the vodka, the women. . . . But now Masefield is stuck in Lubyanka, the KGB’s Moscow prison, waiting for a lifeline from his former employer. Meanwhile, over in England, a Russian spy is pining for his homeland. Having lived as Bernard Forbes Campbell Alleyn for years and taken a wife and had two daughters under that alias, he’s now been exposed as KGB Captain Leonid Liubimov. Arrested for treason and then for espionage, he is in prison at Wormwood Scrubs, London. The only ticket out for these two men is a spy exchange.

Posted back to Berlin, Wilderness is to oversee the exchange of Masefield and Liubimov, but his black market nous hasn’t diminished. There’s money to be made and ten thousand bottles of fine Bordeaux that Wilderness hasn’t forgotten about.

Format: Hardcover (368 pages)   Publisher: Grove Press
Publication date: 5th May 2016  Genre: Historical Fiction

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My Review

The Unfortunate Englishman is the second book in the author’s Joe Wilderness series, the follow-up to Then We Take Berlin. I listened to the audiobook version of that in 2020 and you can read my review here. I was fortunate enough to win a copy of the third book in the series, Hammer To Fall, from Readers First last year so I thought it was about time I read its predecessor (a copy of which I spotted in my local Oxfam bookshop).

The book’s opening chapter continues directly on from the final scene in Then We Take Berlin. Once more Joe Holderness (known to his friends as Wilderness) is in a scrape and on course to get a tongue lashing from his wife Judy, if and when he gets home. (By the way, I love Judy. She always knows when Joe’s up to something nefarious, dangerous, or both.)

Then it’s back to 1945 and the story of how a KGB agent managed to assume the identity of another man, Bernard Alleyn, and live undiscovered for nearly fifteen years, all the time passing secrets back to the Soviet Union until he is unmasked.

Moving forward to 1960, Wilderness is involved in recruiting business man and metallurgy expert Geoffrey Masefield to travel to the Soviet Union as part of a trade delegation in the hope of discovering information about the Soviets missile capability. The storyline is reminiscent of the case of Greville Wynne, arrested as a spy and sentenced to eight years in a Soviet prison. (His experiences have recently been dramatized – with quite a lot of artistic licence – in the film The Courier, starring Benedict Cumberbatch.) Wilderness disappears from the picture in this part of the book, the focus instead on Masefield’s time in Moscow. Masefield is rather the innocent abroad, fulfilling his boyhood dream of becoming spy yet a little disappointed that it’s not quite like in the James Bond books. He’s rather easy prey for the KGB who know exactly how to take advantage of a man’s weaknesses.

There’s a brief trip back in time to Berlin in 1947 to discover more about those ten thousand bottles of Bordeaux before the book picks up where it started, with Burne-Jones rescuing Wilderness from a Berlin jail in 1963. After a few frustrating years shuffling paperwork, Wilderness is ordered to return to Berlin to oversee the spy exchange.  As you might expect, not everything goes to plan, especially when Wilderness encounters two old sparring partners from the past plus the woman who, for a brief time, captured his heart. Perhaps he should have heeded the advice of his friend Eddie: “Joe, Berlin has been a disaster area for you. It’s marked on the map with a big black cross and a sign saying ‘here be dragons’.”

Although written five years ago, the book seems surprisingly up-to-date. Proving nothing much changes, the failure of the Americans and British to anticipate the construction of the Berlin wall cutting off West Berlin is described as a ‘failure of intelligence’. Where have we heard that recently? And no doubt Burne-Jones’s observation that ‘it is far better to say nothing and appear ignorant than to admit we knew and appear futile’ still applies as well.

I loved the brief appearance by a character from the author’s other series and also how the title of the book could be interpreted in a number of ways.  Is ‘the unfortunate Englishman’ Alleyn, separated from his family and languishing in a British jail, Masefield, the inept spy captured by the Soviets, or even Wilderness, more at home in the field than behind a desk?

The author clearly has a love of short chapters – The Unfortunate Englishman has 171! – but it’s a classy, perfectly paced spy thriller with great period atmosphere and a plot which is a satisfying blend of the personal and the political. I can’t wait to pluck Hammer To Fall off my bookshelf and get stuck in.

The Unfortunate Englishman is book 19 of my 20 Books of Summer 2021. Nearly there!

In three words: Gripping, pacy, action-packed

Try something similar: The Spy Who Came In From The Cold by John le Carré

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John LawtonAbout the Author

John Lawton worked for Channel 4 for many years. He is the author of Then We Take Berlin, the first in the Joe Wilderness series. He has also written seven novels in his Troy series, the standalone novel, Sweet Sunday, a couple of short stories, and the occasional essay. He writes very slowly and almost on the hoof in the USA or Italy, but professes to be a resident of a tiny village in the Derbyshire Peak District. (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

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