An armchair time bomb
Mail on Sunday
This is a novel to mirror the disintegration of our times, the unstated irony of which is that a politics so provincial can breed a writer and an art so universal
Observer
A gripping read which you will find impossible to put down
Literary Review
Very much the thinking person's thriller - utterly tense and riveting, but also posing an acute moral dilemma for an ordinary person caught up in the troubled politics of Northern Ireland
Daily Express
It insists on being read at a sitting, for it is imperative to know what happens next
Financial Times
As good as one has come to expect from Brian Moore: the pace never flags; the writing is crisp and taut; the moral crises... are intensely complex and gripping
Irish Independent
When Michael Dillon is ordered by the IRA to park his car in the carpark of a Belfast hotel, he is faced with a moral choice which leaves him absolutely nowhere to turn. He knows that he is planting a bomb that would kill and maim dozens of people. But he also knows that if he doesn't, his wife will be killed.
See also: Reading in the Dark by Seamus Deane
When Michael Dillon is ordered by the IRA to park his car in the carpark of a Belfast hotel, he is faced with a moral choice which leaves him absolutely nowhere to turn. But he also knows that if he doesn't, his wife will be killed.
See also: Reading in the Dark by Seamus Deane