Chill Factor

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A01=Richard Falkirk
action
adventure
america
assassin
Author_Richard Falkirk
betrayal
bill conran
british
Category=FHD
Category=FJ
classic
cold war
collins crime
cormoran strike
crime
death
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_thrillers
friendship
hard-boiled
historical
iceland
international
intrigue
jack reacher
james bond
john grisham
karin slaughter
keflavik
literary
lucy clarke
lucy foley
military
murder
mystery
nato
page turner
plot twists
procedural
russian
secret agent
spy
stephen king
the guest list
thriller
tough
travel
war
winter
world
world war

Product details

  • ISBN 9780008433871
  • Weight: 160g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jan 2021
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Iceland. In the winter it gets light at 10am and dark at 2pm. The daily announcement of the Chill Factor allows you to calculate how quickly you could die from exposure…

Iceland is erupting – and not just its volcano.

It is 1971, the height of the Cold War, and anti-American feeling among Icelanders is running high. When a teenager is found dead after a drunken night out, her clothes torn and face bruised, anger is directed towards the military personnel at the NATO air base at Keflavik who outnumber the local population.

British agent Bill Conran, invited by the Americans to uncover a Russian spy ring, comes to realise that this is no routine assignment. Unsure who can be trusted, and targeted by an unknown assassin, he discovers that Iceland, for all its cold beauty, has never been hotter.

Richard Falkirk was a pseudonym of Derek Lambert, who was born in 1929. He served in the RAF for two and a half years and then worked as a journalist for local newspapers, becoming a foreign correspondent on the Daily Mirror and then the Daily Express, travelling the world to dangerous locations that later inspired his books. His first novel, Angels in the Snow (1969), was based on first-hand knowledge from a year’s assignment to Moscow and entailed him smuggling the manuscript out of the country in a wheelchair. From journeying up the Himalayas in a jeep to being shot at in Israel, his experiences informed his authentic tales of espionage and adventure that helped turn him into a bestselling author of more than 30 novels. Derek’s last book, Spanish Lessons, is an affectionate and often hilarious portrait of giving up life as a globe-trotting journalist to settling down to life in rural Spain with his wife Diane.

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