
BUDAPEST HAND
The Danube Gives Up Its Secrets. Book Two of the Dead Hand Trilogy

Genre:
Thriller & Noir
Author:
David Brierley
Publisher:
Safe House Books
Language:
AUTHOR BIO:
David Brierley was born in Durban. He moved to Canada, then England and back to South Africa all by the age of thirteen. Travel and curiosity about different countries is deep in his nature. After Oxford University, he taught at a lycée in France followed by work in London advertising agencies. Once his career as a novelist was established he moved to France. As well as writing, he was a prison visitor. Together with his wife Jill he created a garden that won first prize in a regional competitio...
Pages:
274
Publication:
Rights available:
Danish, Dutch, Estonian, Faroese, Finnish, French, German, Icelandic, Italian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Swedish
DESCRIPTION:
Eve was dead. This much journalist Bazil Potter distinctly understood. Until the evening when he sees her on the TV news, in a clip filmed in Budapest, the city where she died. A clip all recordings of which are swiftly destroyed on the orders of government, the government Eve worked for. He may have no proof, but Bazil knows what he saw and
he knows it was Eve.
Because no man forgets his wife.
So begins Bazil’s journey of discovery. A journey that takes him back to Budapest, a city still tormented by memories of Soviet oppression, a city where shady diplomats and ruthless gangsters lie at the heart of a story Bazil knows he will never be allowed to tell, the city where his parents were born and where he buried his wife. Or at least what was found of her in the Danube.
A single, severed hand.
REVIEWS:
Tough...witty...in the best tradition of suspense fiction. New Yorker Super skilled graft of fiction onto history...an authentic winner. Sunday Times Unusual, exotic and tantalising. Irish Times Has the rancid strength of a distillation of the best of Le Carré and Deighton: an authentic winner. Sunday Times In the top flight of thriller writers. Natal Mercury Smashing action scenes...superb entertainment. New York Times Book Review Espionage in the le Carré class The Observer Brierley’s style is first class, and his evocation of external bleakness...is superb. The Jerusalem Post One is definitely hooked from the first page BBC French Service Written with all the sly cynicism of the spy world, along with some wonderful descriptions of a country coming to terms with a changing present while ...
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