Picking up from where The Somme Stations left off, the eighth instalment in Andrew Martin\'s Jim Stringer railway detective series finds the captain transported to Baghdad (or \"Mespot\" as the British forces universally dub the place) in the sweltering summer months of 1917. Newcomers will fall quickly for the writer\'s charms as a purveyor of historical fiction, and for the plodding and thoughtful reluctance of Stringer, who is required to gather evidence against Lt Col Shepherd, and either \"bring [him] to book\" for colluding with the enemy, or clear his name. Martin is an astute and accurate novelist who easily summons evocative, dramatic landscapes and Baghdad\'s claustrophobic alleyways. He\'s also clever to point his narrative to the region\'s future: \"Mespot\" in the later months of the Great War may be a sideshow to the bleak killing fields of France and Belgium, but the prize it may yield (described as a \"veritable lake of petroleum\") appears like an oasis on the post-war horizon. The National
GMT 19:56 2017 Tuesday ,10 October
Australian publisher to challenge record Rebel Wilson payoutGMT 13:46 2017 Thursday ,07 September
Spymaster George Smiley returns in new Le Carre novelGMT 12:42 2017 Thursday ,20 July
China's banned books fade from Hong KongGMT 14:54 2017 Saturday ,17 June
Amazon: from online bookseller to internet titanGMT 09:09 2017 Wednesday ,19 April
Braille reading contest winners honouredGMT 07:10 2017 Wednesday ,19 April
Deputy Premier patronises book launchGMT 07:26 2017 Tuesday ,18 April
Abu Dhabi gears up for international book fairGMT 12:19 2017 Friday ,14 April
Sharjah ruler launches book versionMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©