Everyone is gripped by Stephen Ronson:
'A brilliant noir thriller set in the darkest days of the Second World War' Stephen Leather
'A gripping World War Two thriller . . . Every shadow hides a potential threat and the tension never lets up. A must read' Reader review ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'Ronson delivers a cracking yarn, convincingly told. John Cook is the Jack Reacher of 1940s Britain' Damien Lewis
'My God, this was great. It left me with a book hangover. I felt like I was there in 1940s England . . . The writing is really 3D. You really feel like you're there. It's very immersive, and I love the witty humour' Reader review ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
'A vivid sense of place with tension on every level, The Last Line dripped with historical detail and authenticity. I absolutely loved it' Marion Todd
'A tough, taut wartime thriller that reads like a cross between Alastair MacLean and Lee Child and atmospherically conjures up the spectre of war, the threat of Nazi invasion and other evils uncomfortably close to home. Dad's Army, it ain't!' Robbie Morrison
'Thrilling and intriguing in equal measure. Like Jack Reacher on the Home Front in WWII' Mason Cross
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton
ISBN: 9781399745734
Number of pages: 320
Dimensions: 198 x 129 mm
Praise for Stephen Ronson:
'A brilliant noir thriller set in the darkest days of the Second World War' - Stephen Leather
'Ronson delivers a cracking yarn, convincingly told. John Cook is the Jack Reacher of 1940s Britain' - Damien Lewis
'A vivid sense of place with tension on every level, The Last Line dripped with historical detail and authenticity. I absolutely loved it' - Marion Todd
'A tough, taut wartime thriller that reads like a cross between Alastair MacLean and Lee Child and atmospherically conjures up the spectre of war, the threat of Nazi invasion and other evils uncomfortably close to home. Dad's Army, it ain't!' - Robbie Morrison
'Thrilling and intriguing in equal measure. Like Jack Reacher on the Home Front in WWII' - Mason Cross
'The pace is quick and the action keeps coming. With well-chosen prose, the author gives the reader a snapshot of English countryside during wartime, with victory gardens, makeshift landing strips in farmers' fields and railway platforms full of evacuated children. It was a page-turner and I couldn't get enough' - SaltyGalReads
'Addictively readable' - Irish Independent
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