High Dive
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- 8,99 €
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- 8,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
‘A meticulous and gripping reimagination of the Brighton bomb’ Observer, Best Novels of 2015
In September 1984, a man calling himself Roy Walsh checked into The Grand Hotel in Brighton and planted a bomb in room 629. The device was primed to explode in twenty-four days, six hours and six minutes, when intelligence had confirmed that Margaret Thatcher and her whole cabinet would be staying in the hotel.
Moving between the luxurious hospitality of a British tourist town and the troubled city of Belfast, and told from the perspectives of a young IRA explosives expert, the deputy hotel manager and his teenage daughter, High Dive is a taut and tender retelling of one of the most ambitious assassination attempts against the British establishment.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
You had to remember you were at war." This is what Dan, an IRA volunteer in Belfast, tells himself in March, 1984, not long after his 24th birthday, which was also the day he found out he would be planting a bomb intending to kill Margaret Thatcher and as many members of her cabinet as possible. In September of that same year, an actual slow-release time bomb did explode at the Grand Hotel, in Brighton, England, killing five people but missing the prime minister. That explosion is the real-life event at the heart of this brilliant, urgent, unstoppable novel, Lee's first to be released in the U.S. Having second and even third thoughts about the mission, Dan reckons with himself: "The truth was that on an operation you felt clean of guilt and will. It was day-to-day Belfast life that made you dirty." Interspersed with Dan's mounting internal struggles and resolve are the lives of Freya Finch and her father, who's called Moose, both of whom work at the Grand Hotel and are busy getting ready for the prime minister's arrival. Freya has just graduated from high school and is restless and uncertain. Her father's in a similar position, though it's the middle-aged version, in which he's grappling with the limitations of his health, his appeal to women, and his ability to understand his newly adult daughter. From its breathless first scene, in which the IRA "interviews" Dan at age 18, testing his instincts and intuition, to seeing Freya and Moose navigating the mundane tasks of everyday service work (the reader knowing all the while just how precarious their lives are), this is an incredible novel of rare insight, velocity, depth, and daring.