Kompromat
A Brexit Affair
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
2016. The world is on the brink of crisis. Who could predict how events would play out?
In this satirical thriller, Stanley Johnson, former MEP and father to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, just might have.
‘Perfect beach material.’ Independent
In Britain, Prime Minister Jeremy Hartley is fighting a referendum nobody thinks he will lose.
In the USA, brash showman Ronald Craig is fighting a Presidential Election nobody thinks he can win.
In the USSR, Igor Popov, the Russian President, is using both events to achieve his own malevolent ends.
Together, these three men will change the course of the world forever.
In his brilliant new thriller, Stanley Johnson, environmentalist and former politician, has written an alternative account of the seismic events that took place on both sides of the Atlantic. There's greed, corruption, lies... what could possibly go wrong?
'Brilliant.' The Sunday Times
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This thriller has the makings of a gleeful romp through geopolitical skullduggery, but Johnson (The Commissioner) has laid out something that looks more like an alternative history for our grim and disrupted times. The hyperkinetic action starts off with Russian president Igor Popov shooting a putative Republican presidential candidate in the buttocks with a tranquilizer dart in a cleverly contrived Siberian setup, but it keeps returning to efforts to jump-start, then fan the flames of, a Brexit-style campaign for the United Kingdom. Johnson, a longtime figure on the British political scene, aims for satire as he sketches out Operation Tectonic Plate, Popov's nefarious scheme to destabilize his country's opponents and place a friendly face in the White House, but the ripped-from-the-headlines plot is too close to actual (or easily imagined) fact to provoke real laughter. The reader will find no sympathetic characters, and the corridors of power from Berlin to Beijing to Washington all convey the same sense of grasping self-interest and greedy fear that confirms the worst suspicions of how politics really work.