Brothers In War: Number 9 in series (Retallick Saga)

Brothers In War: Number 9 in series (Retallick Saga)

by E. V. Thompson (Author)

Synopsis

1915: Ben Retallick is asked by a War Office friend to provide two traction engines for a secret expedition attempting to take two gunboats overland from Cape Town to Lake Tanganyika - more than 3,000 miles - to wrest control of the lake from the Germans. He sends engines with young Ruddlemoor as the driver, who meets a Portuguese East African nurse and takes her side against a group of white racist south Africans. Meanwhile Antonia St Anna is influential in having Ben released, when he is arrested on circumstantial evidence provided by a business rival and accused of being pro-German. In Brothers in War, E. V. Thompson returns to his acclaimed Retallick saga, immersing the family in the upheaval of the First World War and, through them, creating a captivating tale of love and war, loyalty and betrayal, loss and adventure that weaves its way from Cornwall to the uncharted territory of the depths of Africa - and an eventful conclusion in Cornwall once more.

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Quantity

4 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 416
Edition: New
Publisher: Sphere
Published: 07 Jun 2007

ISBN 10: 0751536180
ISBN 13: 9780751536188
Book Overview: * Author PR activity to include local signing sessions * Advertising activity throughout the summer in the West Country * Submitted for trade promotions * Reading copies available

Media Reviews
[He] has always been a good writer in his chosen field of historical fabulations and, as usual, he emphasises the historic over the romantic. His many fans won't be disappointed BRISTOL EVENING News No more readable novel will come out of Cornwall for a long time. It confirms Thompson's place in the top flight of novelists, right there alongside Dame Daphne du Maurier and Winston Graham: the creme de la creme CORNISH GUARDIAN These romantic sagas delight The INDEPENDENT
Author Bio
E. V. Thompson was born in London and spent nine years in the Navy before joining the Bristol police. He moved to Hong Kong, then Rhodesia and had over 200 stories published before returning to England to become a full-time award-winning writer.