Home
/
Fiction
/
The Excalibur Codex
The Excalibur Codex
Sep 21, 2024 10:24 AM

Author:James Douglas

The Excalibur Codex

Jamie Saintclair embarks on another action-packed historical adventure, guaranteed to have you gripped from page one! A must read for fans of Dan Brown, Chris Kuzneski and Scott Mariani.

READERS ARE LOVING THE EXCALIBUR CODEX!

"This mystery/thriller moves at a cracking pace from page one..." - 5 STARS

"I couldn't put the book down..." - 5 STARS

"Can't wait to read the next Jamie Saintclair book - really addictive." - 5 STARS

***************************************

A LEGEND TO SOME. A SYMBOL TO OTHERS. FOR A DANGEROUS FEW, THE MEANS TO A TERRIFYING END...

For countless generations the sword had been kept hidden, ready for a time of need. But not hidden well enough, because in 1937 it vanished...

1941 - twelve SS generals gather to re-enact an ancient rite and call on the spirits of Europe's mightiest warriors to aid them in the coming battle in the East. At the heart of the ritual is Excalibur, the mythical weapon pulled from a stone by King Arthur.

2010 - Art recovery expert Jamie Saintclair laughs when he reads the codex to a German war veteran's will, the strange ritual it describes and the mention of a sword named Excalibur. But collector Adam Steele is convinced - and if Jamie can find the legendary sword, he will pay a small fortune for it.

With a team of international assassins on his trail, the hunt for Excalibur takes Jamie from Germany to eastern Poland and a deadly encounter in Hitler's Wolf's Lair...

Jamie Saintclair's adventures continue in The Samurai Inheritance. Have you read The Doomsday Testament and The Isis Covenant, his previous two adventures?

Reviews

Impeccably researched and high on intrigue, the opening chapter will have you absolutely hooked from the explosive start.

—— Saturday (Supp. to the Scottish Daily Record)

Three girls escaping horror and hardship to make new lives in Sweden become the inspiration for troubled poet Jesper. But Mankell is too clever and cunning an author to go down any predictable path. Inspirational

—— Henry Sutton , Daily Mirror

This quirky offering sets out to tackle the weighty topics of immigration and how refugees affect Swedish society

—— Doug Johnston , Independent on Sunday

Mankell is giving a voice to those who do not possess one. Some may feel that there are two kinds of novel here, which remain obstinately heterogeneous. But such is Mankell’s skill that we surrender to whatever mode the book settles into – and it might be argued that the comic sugaring of the pill in The Shadow Girls makes the hidden agenda all the more potent

—— Barry Forshaw , Independent

As we are drawn into the shadow world of immigrant life in Sweden, Mankell’s blend of comedy and moving drama provides a voice for those who lose theirs on their journey from oppression to imagined freedom; freedom which is often transient and blighted with prejudice and racism

—— Irish Examiner

Fascinating novel

—— Bella Magazine

A passionate and enjoyable tale that intertwines the story of a failed writer with those of the refugee women to whom he teaches creative writing

—— Sunday Telegraph

Mankell adroitly mixes cheerful satire and harrowing detail, and this hymn to the mistreated and marginalised sparks with passion

—— James Smart , Guardian

The writing is beautiful and the plot so cleverly constructed I never guessed any of the twists

—— Claire Douglas , Sunday Times bestselling author of Local Girl Missing

Weaver's books get better each time - tense, complex, written with flair as well as care

—— Guardian

Terrific

—— Sunday Times

Tim Weaver writes books so meticulously researched that the reader is educated as well as entertained, enthralled and intrigued

—— Liz Nugent , Sunday Times bestselling author of Lying in Wait

A dark, complex and visceral read

—— Financial Times

Perfect plotting, great characterisation, and the kind of payoff that a thriller of this calibre deserves

—— Bookgeeks

Immaculately researched but delivered with such a deft touch that it never feels like a history lesson…superlative.

—— Mail on Sunday

Harris lightly fictionalizes the historical narrative of the anti-semetic persecution of Alfred Dreyfus - brilliantly retold.

—— Times Saturday Review

Gripping from beginning to end

—— Sunday Times

'informative, accomplished and highly enjoyable.

—— Evening Standard

An Officer and a Spy is written in elegant prose reminiscent of the 19th-century historical novel, but its form is a hybrid of the contemporary thriller, the spy novel and the courtroom drama. It is persuasive and engaging on all of these levels, while providing a unique and fresh reading of the Dreyfus Affair. It’s also timely, serving as a warning against religious bigotry and groupthink.

—— Irish Times

People who have read my fiction reviews in this paper will be familiar with my assertion that the glory of imaginative literature rests in its ability to make the reader think and feel at the same time. This marvellous novel does just that. It may well be the best book Robert Harris has yet written - and that’s saying something.

—— Scotsman

Harris’s gift for breathing life into historical characters is on full display in this brilliant fictionalisation of L’affair Dreyfus.

—— Independent

It is tantalising to speculate on what liberties an author has taken when fictionalising a true story but the facts of the Dreyfus Affair are so incredible that Harris has no need to embellish. He fashions an enthralling frame and lets the astonishing tale unfold.

—— Independent on Sunday

The choice of narrator is sure-footed. Georges Picquart makes a fascinatingly ambiguous figure around whom to anchor this tale of moral absolutes.

—— Literary Review

A compelling narrative.

—— Jewish Chronicle

Robert Harris is the master of the political thriller and his latest finds him in fine form.

—— Press Association

Both gripping thriller and Buchanesque adventure: its revelations impeccably paced and its original material used to poignant effect… An Officer and a Spy is carried throughout by the peerless characterisation of Picquart… But most of all it is the honest, implacable soldier’s dawning realisation that the institutions in which he has placed his faith are appallingly corrupt that has the most tenacious hold on the reader. It still has power to shock – and it leaves us in no doubt as to an old story’s continuing resonance.

—— Christobel Kent , Guardian

An event that obsessed France and the world is retold here, in forensic detail, with great clarity and humanity.

—— Country Life

I have just had a preview copy of Robert Harris’s new novel An Officer and a Spy, a thriller based on the Dreyfus case. Like John le Carré, Harris is interested in rogue intelligence, corrupted by politics. Unlike le Carré he does not lay it on too thick. The story of Dreyfus, a Jewish army officer convicted in France for spying for the Germans then exonerated, is one of history’s great political dramas. Harris backs the power of argument and reason. Politicians reportedly took Charles Moore’s Thatcher biography with them on holiday. Harris’s thriller would be perfect for the trip home.’

—— Sarah Sands, Editor , Evening Standard
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved