Making Enemies

Making Enemies

by Francis Bennett (Author)

Synopsis

The first in a series of novels tracing the progress of the Cold War and its impact on the way we live. The action ranges from Cambridge to London, Berlin to Moscow, Helsinki to Washington, and the events, issues and tensions of the period are sharply defined. After the war, the Russians are racing to catch up with the West in the nuclear arms race, and a complicated plot is hatched by Andropov. He blackmails Ruth, a Russian physicist who is romantically involved with Stevens a nuclear physicist from Cambridge, into fronting an association of scientists concerned at the lack of safeguards in the Russian nuclear industry. The aim is to mislead their Western counterparts into thinking that they (the Russians) are further behind than they actually are. To make sure that the scientists are really concerned, a laboratory handling nuclear materials is deliberately blown up, along with the neighbouring block of flats. Struggling to make sense of this are Monty, a cynical Whitehall spook, Danny the son of Stevens and Ruth herself.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 416
Publisher: Orion
Published: 19 Mar 1998

ISBN 10: 0575065524
ISBN 13: 9780575065529
Book Overview: Voted Book of the Year (1998) by Michael Hartland in the Daily Telegraph (5th December 1998)

Author Bio
Son of military historian Ralph Bennett and biographer Daphne Bennett. Educated at Radley and Magdalene College Cambridge. M.D. of Book Data, the informat