Author:Terry Brooks
A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, an evil legacy long believed dead is stirring. Now the dark side of the Force threatens to overwhelm the light, and only an ancient Jedi prophecy stands between hope and doom for the entire galaxy.
On the green, unspoiled world of Naboo, Jedi Master Qui-Gon Jinn and his apprentice, Obi-Wan Kenobi, arrive to protect the realm’s young queen as she seeks a diplomatic solution to end the siege of her planet by Trade Federation warships. At the same time, on desert-swept Tatooine, a slave boy named Anakin Skywalker, who possesses a strange ability for understanding the “rightness” of things, toils by day and dreams by night—of becoming a Jedi Knight and finding a way to win freedom for himself and his beloved mother. It will be the unexpected meeting of Jedi, Queen, and a gifted boy that will mark the start of a drama that will become legend.
She was always in the front rank of unpredictable, original, serious writers exploring the deeper themes of ancient as well as contemporary experience
—— GuardianIris Murdoch really knows how to write - she can tell a story, delineate a character, catch an atmosphere with deadly accuracy
—— John BetjemanI suspect that when the intellectual map of our own times comes to be sketched out, Iris Murdoch will occupy a position analogous to Tolstoy and Dostoyevsky... Murdoch writes better than anyone about the condition of being love: both the ecstatic joys of it and its capacity to turn otherwise decent individuals into monsters of selfishness and cruelty... Her vision of the world is heart-rending, but ultimately celebratory
—— A.N. WilsonMesmerising
—— The TimesTreading a fine line between horror and thriller ... seriously rich yet relentlessly disturbing
—— Daily MirrorBolton has written a gripping thriller that does not disappoint
—— Reviewing the EvidenceWildly entertaining, Ratlines is a superb mystery but in addition, a spotlight on a slice of Irish history largely ignored. This is a complex mystery told in the exceptional style that Stuart Neville has made his own. Jameson and Nazis, Irish rebel songs and Charles Haughey, it's a bold and brilliant blend
—— Ken BruenA superbly written, supremely intelligent thriller
—— Mail on SundayAbsolute blockbuster – and one you won’t want to put down
—— Crime ReviewSittenfeld's humour and sharp observation deliver a coming-of-age novel you can relate to
—— Daily Express