Book Review – The Dark Isle by Clare Carson #20BooksofSummer2025

About the Book

Sam grew up in the shadow of the secret state. Her father was an undercover agent, full of tall stories about tradecraft and traitors. Then he died, killed in the line of duty.

Now Sam has travelled to Hoy, in Orkney, to piece together the puzzle of her father’s past. Haunted by echoes of childhood holidays, Sam is sure the truth lies buried here, somewhere.

What she finds is a tiny island of dramatic skies, swooping birds, rugged sea stacks and just four hundred people. An island remote enough to shelter someone who doesn’t want to be found. An island small enough to keep a secret…

Format: Hardcover (380 pages) Publisher: Head of Zeus
Publication date: 1st June 2017 Genre: Thriller

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My Review

The Dark Isle is the third book in a trilogy. I haven’t read either of the first two but frankly I didn’t find myself at a disadvantage. In fact, if I hadn’t discovered it was part of a trilogy, I don’t think I’d have guessed because it comes across as a fully developed standalone story. However, because I haven’t read the previous two books my review may unwittingly contain spoilers.

The Dark Isle is a blend of spy thriller and family drama that moves back and forth between Sam’s teenage years in 1976 and 1989, some years after her father’s death. She’s now a rather penniless archaeology student working on a research proposal for her PhD and living in a grimy rundown flat with her best friend Becky in an insalubrious part of London.

Whilst spending the summer on a dig in Orkney, Sam catches sight of a figure from the past: Pierce, the father of Anna, her childhood friend who disappeared from her life fifteen years before. She and Anna spent the hot summer of 1976 together, having adventures inspired by the fables told by Sam’s father. Sam was rather starstruck by Anna, in awe of her boldness and maturity. The fact both their fathers worked in undercover roles, albeit employed by different government bodies, created a unique bond between them. Then suddenly it was all over. Anna’s father’s abandoned her and her mother and there has been no communication in the intervening years. It’s almost as if Anna wanted to disappear too.

Sam wonders why after such a period of absence, Pierce has chosen to reveal himself now, and why to her? What does he want from her? And what really happened between Pierce and her father? They’re questions to which Sam can’t resist trying to find the answers, especially because of fragments of conversation between the two men she overheard as a child during a holiday on Orkney.

In searching for answers she unwittingly places herself in danger, as a figure from both men’s past returns with some unfinished business. It leads to some tense and exciting scenes with Sam having to employ all the tradecraft of a spy in an attempt to outwit her pursuers. Not knowing who she can trust doesn’t make it any easier. All she can rely on is her own instincts, and the penknife her father Jim insisted she always carry.

I liked Sam’s transition from quirky teenage loner to slightly grungy, prickly twenty-something. And I really liked the contrast between the wild beauty of Orkney and the remote island of Hoy, and the seedy, rather grimy parts of London Sam inhabits. There’s also a great sense of each time period.

I think what the author did really well is, alongside the espionage element of the plot, give an insight into the impact on a family of someone involved in covert work: the sudden unexplained absences, the mood swings, the constant air of watchfulness, the barely suppressed aggression.

All of this makes The Dark Isle a really accomplished, well-paced thriller. The Dark Isle is book 7 of my 20 Books of Summer.

In three words: Intriguing, atmospheric, pacy
Try something similar: The Bone Road by N. E. Solomons

About the Author

Clare Carson is an anthropologist and works in international development, specialising in human rights. Her father was an undercover policeman in the 1970s. She lives in Brighton.

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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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