This is the book I’ve been waiting for, for years.
Back in the 1970’s, as a young sailor, I discovered Robert Ludlum via the Matarese Circle. I loved his books and found others like him, Nelson Demille being another favourite reads in the down times on board deep sea tankers.
Moving into the 1980’s I devoured each of Tom Clancy’s books, well the early ones anyway.
I loved espionage thrillers.
But there has been a very thin offering of new authors worthy of these, until now.
Zero Risk by Simon Hayes has filled the void.
The book isn’t about espionage in the more traditional sense, it’s about a person who tries to bring down one of Britains biggest banks, and in so doing the Prime Minister.
It has a touch of the Dan Brown, with the antagonist sending cryptic emails with art references in them, but although they add to the story, if you don’t get them, they are quickly explained.
The plot, as written on the Amazon page.
23 December 2024… Rob Tanner should have been enjoying a rare day off from his life-consuming work as Chief Operating Officer at one of the country’s largest banks. But a panicked phone call from a senior colleague forces him to put his Christmas plans on ice: more than a thousand of the bank’s accounts have seen their balances increased by a factor of ten. Exactly ten.
Tanner enlists the help of brilliant American cyber security expert Ashley Markham, but the attacks only worsen: bank balances rise remorselessly and spread to all the nation’s banks. The only clues to the hacker’s intentions are cryptic daily emails, centred on Hieronymus Bosch’s medieval representation of the seven deadly sins—and packed with colourful artistic and cultural references—taunting Tanner and the newly incumbent Prime Minister, James Allen.
With financial markets—and the very world as he knows it—on the brink of collapse, Tanner races against the clock to decode not just the bizarre emails but their deeper meaning, and the implications for who he can really trust. All the while, his former boss “The Toad” is seeking revenge… and answers of his own.
That only really covers the first couple of hundred pages of a book that stretches to nearly eight hundred pages.
There were times in the book I thought I had things cracked, but then something would happen that would throw me entirely in a different direction.
There were times when I thought, “this has to be almost the end, how come there are so many more pages to read”, but a twist would open up another chapter.
Simon Hayes uses the fact that this is a standalone novel to its best advantage.
Nothing, and nobody is sacred. Anything can happen to anybody.
Having said that there are is no shark infested custard. There are no improbable situations. Everything is scarily plausible, and realistic.
An absolutely stunning read.
Pages: 780. Published: The Rubriqs Press Limited. Audiobook length: 25 hours 8 minutes. Narrator Stephanie Racine
