Liberation Square

· Penguin UK
4.0
5 reviews
eBook
400
Pages

About this eBook

A gripping high-concept thriller from the Sunday Times bestselling author of The Turnglass

'This richly imagined thriller is set in an alternate past . . . Tightly plotted, tense and set in a chillingly plausible world'
Sunday Mirror

'A gripping story, with heart' Best thrillers of 2019, Daily Telegraph

*****

It's 1952 and Soviet troops control British streets.

After the disastrous failure of D-Day, Britain is rescued by Russian and American soldiers. The two superpowers divide the nation between them, a wall running through London like a scar.

On the Soviet side of the wall, Jane Cawson suspects her husband, Nick, of secretly seeing his ex-wife, Lorelei, glamorous star of Soviet propaganda films.

But before Jane can confront them, Lorelei is murdered.

To her horror, Nick is arrested for the killing. Desperate to clear his name, Jane must risk the attention of the brutal secret police in order to discover the truth.

Evading them, her search uncovers a trail of corruption - and the higher it leads, the more dangerous it becomes...
___________

'A gripping and well-imagined yarn' Sun

'A gripping murder mystery set in an alternative 1950s Britain . . . One not to miss'
William Ryan, author of The Constant Soldier

'A superb and intelligent piece of alternate history. By turns gripping, terrifying and trenchant, it is a remarkably assured debut' Stav Sherez, author of The Intrusions

'A twisting murder mystery combined with a chillingly plausible alternative history of a divided Cold War London. Brilliant' Mason Cross, bestselling author of The Samaritan

'A brilliantly researched, shockingly plausible thriller' Claire McGowan, author of The Fall

'A tantalising alternative world, and a murder mystery that's sure to appeal to fans of The Man in the High Castle, and Fatherland'
David Young, bestselling author of Stasi Child

Ratings and reviews

4.0
5 reviews
Clare Cope
29 October 2019
Disappointing. The story as a whole was fine, but there were many parts that didn't make sense like Jane putting on a record of Lorelei to copy her voice. Why? These senseless actions seemed to be a recurring part of the story. The backdrop was interesting but not explored enough.
1 person found this review helpful

About the author

Gareth Rubin is an author and journalist who has written for most British national newspapers. He lives in London, and Liberation Square is his first novel.

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