Author:Frederick Forsyth
* The chilling thriller from an international bestselling phenomenon. *
'A triumph of plot, construction and research' The Times
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Plan Aurora, hatched in a remote dacha in the forest outside Moscow and initiated with relentless brilliance and skill, is a plan within a plan that, in its spine-chilling ingenuity, breaches the ultra-secret Fourth Protocol and turns the fears that shaped it into a living nightmare.
A crack Soviet agent, placed under cover in a quiet English country town, begins to assemble a jigsaw of devastation. MI5 investigator John Preston, working against the most urgent of deadlines, leads an operation to prevent the act of murderous destruction aimed at tumbling Britain into revolution...
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Readers love The Fourth Protocol ...
***** 'One of the best spy books around.'
***** 'The Fourth Protocol is my favourite spy novel of all time.'
***** 'Trust a master story teller to write an epic!'
***** 'I have probablyread this book cover-to-cover a dozen times.'
***** 'Have read this book several times but a re-visit every so often seems to be inevitable and worth my time.'
A triumph . . . as good as any Forsyth since The Jackal
—— The TimesForsyth's best book so far
—— Washington PostThe most fascinating, informative and suspenseful spy novel since le Carre's The Little Drummer Girl
—— Irish PressWhen it comes to espionage, international intrigue and suspense, Frederick Forsyth is a master
—— The Washington PostNick Stone is emerging as one of the great all-action characters of recent times. Like his creator, the ex-SAS soldier turned uber agent is unstoppable
—— Daily MirrorTicking like a time-bomb, Andy McNab's latest Nick Stone adventure is full of suspense
—— Express & Star WolverhamptonIt's a blast
—— Peterborough Evening TelegraphSubtle, persuasive and unsettling. A brilliantly troubling and heartening novel
—— Sunday TimesMany passages in The Plot Against America echo feelings voiced today by vulnerable Americans – immigrants and minorities as alarmed by Trump’s election as the Jews of Newark are frightened by Lindbergh’s
—— New YorkerDazzling. The most exciting novelist writing today
The novel is full of his usual furious cackling; tragedy tipping into comedy and comedy into tragedy within the space of a few sentences. The prose is beautiful
—— Mail on SundayA sensation
A polemical classic
—— EsquireBrilliant
One of the best writers of dialogue in the history of inverted commas
—— The TimesA reverberating celebration of family, community and humanity
—— Sunday Times