#BookReview The Man in the Bunker (Tom Wilde 6) by Rory Clements @ZaffreBooks

The Man in the BunkerAbout the Book

Germany, late summer 1945 – The war is over but the country is in ruins. Millions of refugees and holocaust survivors strive to rebuild their lives in displaced persons camps. Millions of German soldiers and SS men are held captive in primitive conditions in open-air detention centres. Everywhere, civilians are desperate for food and shelter. No one admits to having voted Nazi, yet many are unrepentant.

Adolf Hitler is said to have killed himself in his Berlin bunker. But no body was found – and many people believe he is alive. Newspapers are full of stories reporting sightings and theories. Even Stalin, whose own troops captured the bunker, has told President Truman he believes the former Führer is not dead. Day by day, American and British intelligence officers subject senior members of the Nazi regime to gruelling interrogation in their quest for their truth.

Enter Tom Wilde – the Cambridge professor and spy sent in to find out the truth…

Format: Hardback (460 pages)          Publisher: Zaffre
Publication date: 20th January 2022 Genre: Historical Fiction, Thriller

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My Review

Rory Clements’ books featuring Cambridge professor turned spy, Tom Wilde, have become one of my absolute favourite series. I’ve devoured every one of them and The Man in the Bunker was no exception. (I’m also a fan of his John Shakespeare series set in Elizabethan England.)

Who do the intelligence services in Britain and the United States call on when they’ve a tricky problem to solve? Why Cambridge professor of history turned spy Tom Wilde of course – much to the exasperation of his wife, Lydia, in this case.

The brilliantly dramatic and chilling opening chapter is a prelude to everything you could possibly want from a spy thriller: plenty of action scenes, car chases, narrow escapes, assassins waiting in the shadows, wily and ruthless villains, double-crosses galore. There are also a host of interesting secondary characters, such as the colourful Boris Minsky, Jerzy ‘the boy with the camera’ and the dedicated Dr. Angie Gray.  The skilfully crafted plot means there are plenty of side stories the reason for whose inclusion remains deliciously intriguing for a large part of the book.

Wilde is assigned a companion in his investigation, Lieutenant Mozes Heck. Heck is a wonderfully drawn character. Whilst, as readers of the previous books will know, Wilde has his own share of traumatic memories, Heck’s are beyond imagining. His first-hand and very personal experience of the atrocities committed by the Nazis has given him a deep-seated hatred of those Nazis who survived the war and ‘an overpowering hunger’ for revenge. As a result he is utterly ruthless – shoot first, think later – meaning at times he is difficult for Wilde to control.  ‘Heck was in a blood-red world of his own, and no amount of reasoning was going to alter that.’ On the other hand, Heck’s sharp-shooting skills, physical resilience and ability to pass unnoticed are definitely things you want in a difficult situation, and Wilde and Heck experience plenty of those.

Wilde’s investigation into whether Hitler remains alive takes him to the heart of post-war Germany giving the reader a vivid insight into the destruction visited upon cities such as Berlin by Allied bombing and the advance of the Russian army.  ‘This is real life, this is the detritus of war, right here.’ Berlin has become a place of ruined buildings, piles of rubble and people trying to eke out a living in the shattered remains of their city. It’s a dangerous place as well.  ‘The problems start after dark when the desperate and the dispossessed come out and defy the curfew. It’s kill or be killed.’

There also unsettling scenes in the makeshift camps for people displaced by the War including those who survived the concentration camps. And a visit to a particular site in Berlin brings Wilde a chilling reminder of the evil of the Nazi regime. ‘He did not believe in the occult, nor even an afterlife, yet he could hear the children’s cries.’

I can’t say much more about the plot without giving too much away. But, I hear you ask, does Wilde discover if Hitler survived the Berlin bunker? Sorry, not telling. Read the book and find out.

I thought The Man In The Bunker was absolutely fabulous, another masterly spy thriller from the pen of Rory Clements. A few loose ends left subtly dangling at the end of the book leaves me hoping this is not the last outing for Tom Wilde. In the meantime Tom, Lydia deserves her holiday.

In three words: Compelling, action-packed, suspenseful

Try something similar: V2 by Robert Harris

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Rory ClementsAbout the Author

Rory Clements was born on the edge of England in Dover. After a career in national newspapers, he now writes full time in a quiet corner of Norfolk, where he lives with his wife, the artist Naomi Clements Wright, and their family. He won the CWA Ellis Peters Historical Award in 2010 for his second novel, Revenger, and the CWA Historical Dagger in 2018 for Nucleus. Three of his other novels – Martyr, Prince and The Heretics – have been shortlisted for awards.

To find out more about The Man In The Bunker and the previous books in the series, join the Rory Clements Readers’ Club via the link in his website. (Photo credit: Author website)

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The Man in the Bunker

#BlogTour #BookReview Storytellers by Bjørn Larssen

StorytellersWelcome to the opening day of the blog tour for Storytellers by Bjørn Larssen. My thanks to Rachel at Rachel’s Random Resources for inviting me to take part in the tour and for my digital review copy.


StorytellersAbout the Book

Would you murder your brothers to keep them from telling the truth about themselves?

On a long, cold Icelandic night in March 1920, Gunnar, a hermit blacksmith, finds himself with an unwanted lodger – Sigurd, an injured stranger who offers a story from the past. But some stories, even those of an old man who can barely walk, are too dangerous to hear. They alter the listeners’ lives forever… by ending them.

Others are keen on changing Gunnar’s life as well. Depending on who gets to tell his story, it might lead towards an unwanted marriage, an intervention, rejoining the Church, letting the elf drive him insane, or succumbing to the demons in his mind. Will he manage to write his own last chapter?

Bjørn Larssen’s award-winning, Amazon #1 best selling novel is an otherworldly, emotive Icelandic saga – a story of love and loneliness, relief and suffering, hatred… and hope.

Format: Paperback (292 pages)       Publisher: josephtailor
Publication date: 28th March 2019 Genre: Historical Fiction, Mystery

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My Review

There are shades of One Thousand and One Nights with Sigurd as a latter day Scheherazade trying to eke out his story in order to give him time to execute a plan, hints of which very gradually emerge. Sigurd’s story is in the tradition of Icelandic sagas told around the fireside. I liked the way the book explored the concept of storytelling, whether as a creative act, for entertainment, to impart a moral message, as a form of self-deception (the stories we tell ourselves) or a means to spread rumour, gossip or disinformation. The inhabitants of Gunnar’s village particularly enjoy the last three.

Throughout the book Gunnar remains an eccentric, solitary and troubled character who experiences moments of extreme mental distress and struggles with addiction.  However, his generous nature means he never loses our sympathy and I’m sure I’m not the only reader willing him to resist the lure of those bottles or to share his pleasure in his nice new coat.

There are some nice touches of humour such as Gunnar’s christening of a group of well-meaning ladies whose visits he comes to dread as ‘The Constipated Hags of Iceland’ or Sigurd’s wish that Gunnar leave him alone so he can finish the ‘What Season Actually Suits Your Personality’ quiz in The Women’s Paper. Reading material is in short supply in Gunnar’s village and I think we all suspect Sigurd is definitely a (dead of) winter person. And Gunnar’s initial suggestion for a suitable name for an elf made me laugh out loud.

The author created a good sense of what daily life must have been like in a small village in Iceland in earlier times. Gunnar’s story is set in 1920 although I must say there was very little, apart from the doctor possessing a telephone and Sigurd’s reading matter, to obviously position it in that period. I found some concentration was required so as not to get confused between the characters in Sigurd’s story and Gunnar’s life. As it turns out, I needn’t have worried.

I confess it was curiosity rather than a feeling of suspense that propelled me through the book. It starts quite slowly – indeed I had some sympathy with Gunnar’s frustration at the speed of Sigurd’s storytelling. At one point, Gunnar complains to Sigurd about a lack of action scenes in the story and Sigurd replies, ‘It’s called a build-up… It’s for dramatic effect’. Storytellers would not meet my definition of a page-turner; for me it’s more a character study but no less entertaining for that. And it’s fair to say the book picks up pace in the final chapters with some last minute surprises and reveals.

In three words: Quirky, detailed, tender

Try something similarA Stranger from the Storm by William Burton McCormick

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Storytellers bjorn-promo-photo-2020aAbout the Author

Bjørn Larssen is a Norse heathen made in Poland, but mostly located in a Dutch suburb, except for his heart which he lost in Iceland. Born in 1977, he self-published his first graphic novel at the age of seven in a limited edition of one, following this achievement several decades later with his first book containing multiple sentences and winning awards he didn’t design himself. His writing is described as ‘dark’ and ‘literary’, but he remains incapable of taking anything seriously for more than 60 seconds.

Bjørn has a degree in mathematics and has worked as a graphic designer, a model, a bartender, and a blacksmith (not all at the same time). His hobbies include sitting by open fires, dressing like an extra from Vikings, installing operating systems, and dreaming about living in a log cabin in the north of Iceland. He owns one (1) husband and is owned by one (1) neighbourhood cat.

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