Rebellion
By (Author) James McGee
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperCollins
15th September 2011
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
400
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 31mm
360g
Rebellion is brewing in Napoleonic Paris, in the new action-packed novel from the author of the bestselling Ratcatcher
October 1812: Britain and France are still at war. France is engaged on two battle fronts - Spain and Russia - and her civilians are growing weary of the fight. Rebellion is brewing. Since Napoleon Bonaparte appointed himself as First Consul, there have been several attempts to either kill or overthrow him. All have failed, so far
Meanwhile in London, Bow Street Runner Matthew Hawkwood has been seconded to the foreign arm of the Secret Service. There, he meets the urbane Henry Brooke, who tells him hes to join a colleague in Paris on a special mission.
Brooke's agent has come up with a daring plan and he needs Hawkwood's help to put it into action. If the plan is successful it could lead to a negotiated peace treaty between France and the allies. Failure would mean prison, torture and a meeting with the guillotine
Praise for Resurrectionist:
Breakneck pace, brutal action, clever characterisation and twisty plotting James McGee brings Regency London to life or perhaps I should say to death!' Reginald Hill
Praise for Ratcatcher:
'Irresistible rambunctious entertainment'
Observer
'Rumbustiousa darkly attractive hero, terrific period atmosphere and action' The Times
'Atmospheric and well researched try it' Daily Mirror
'Ratcatcher has everything: duels and derring-do, London highlife and lowlife, French lechery and treachery all contained in a fast-moving, cleverly constructed plot with an immaculately detailed historical background. Add a hero who is ruthless, mysterious and sexy, and it's a safe bet that Ratcatcher marks the start of a series that will run and run and run!' Reginald Hill
Ratcatcher is a richly enjoyable and impressively researched novel also very gripping. James McGee is clearly a rising star in the historical galaxy and I look forward to Hawkwood's return' Andrew Taylor, author of 'The American Boy'
James McGee has worked in banking, sales, newspapers, the airline industry and bookselling. His interest in the Napoleonic period dates back to his first reading of C.S. Foresters The Gun. This is the fourth in a series of books featuring Matthew Hawkwood.