Goering's Gold
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- 12,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
"I clamor for the next installment of Richard O’Rawe’s rollicking series of heist novels featuring James 'Ructions' O’Hare." — Sarah Weinman, The New York Times Book Review
"Mr. O’Rawe ... has written the most riotous caper novel since his own 'Northern Heist,' and with luck, there will be more adventures ahead. "—Tom Nolan, The Wall Street Journal
Ructions O'Hare returns in a thriller — based on one of history's greatest unsolved heists — pitting him against the IRA, Interpol, and neo-Nazis . . .
When WWII ended, the allies discovered that a huge amount of gold bullion plundered by Nazi Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering had gone missing. Some believed the gold had been hidden in a train box car in Poland. Others that it was secreted in Lake Toplitz in the Austrian Alps. And a few thought it was buried in the Republic of Ireland, which was neutral during the war.
When ex-IRA soldier Ructions O'Hare stumbles on a piece of Nazi memorabilia once owned by Goering, he begins to think that those who suspect the gold was in Ireland just might be on to something.
But for Ructions to return to Ireland is easier said than done. For a start, the IRA is after him for not paying them a cut from a huge bank robbery he carried out in Belfast. And then there's the Neo-Nazis, who believe that Goering's gold rightfully belongs to them, and who are happy to kill anyone who gets in their way.
And as Ructions gathers clues to the gold's location and, as his many adversaries realize he's getting closer, it's as if a noose is tightening around his neck...
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In the prologue of O'Rawe's superior sequel to 2021's Northern Heist, Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering sends an aide to Ireland on an important mission in 1944. In 2009, four years after Ructions O'Hare stole £36.5 million from the National Bank of Ireland in Belfast, a heist blamed on the IRA, the IRA is hunting O'Hare, who's been lying low in France. They are seeking both a share of the loot and O'Hare's help exonerating them. Meanwhile, members of a neo-Nazi group break into the home of Serge Mercier, a Frenchman who helped O'Hare launder much of the proceeds of his robbery, because they think he possesses Goering's ceremonial baton, a gift from Hitler. Mercier turns for help with the neo-Nazi threat to O'Hare, who learns the baton is considered the key to finding a legendary lost cache of gold bullion that Goering possibly concealed in Northern Ireland. As the plot moves at a breakneck pace, O'Rawe adds more depth to his already complex antihero. Crime fiction fans will hope to see a lot more of O'Hare.