Tuesday, January 3, 2012

The Sunday Club: Da vinci Code meets Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels.

The Sunday Club: Da vinci Code meets Lock, Stock & Two Smoking Barrels. Review



Set in modern-day England, The Sunday Club's four main characters have one thing in common, they need to raise a lot of money, and they need it by next Sunday.
Ray Troy’s bank has just pulled the plug on his antiques business and he needs to finance his young daughter’s cancer treatment; Dave Gee has been fired from his lifelong job and the hardnut Stanhope brothers’ pub has been condemned by the council due to subsidence.
The unusual answer to their needs comes in the form of Craig, an autistic savant. His recently deceased uncle, Charlie Bath, a paranoid gangster who refused to leave paper trails, instead entrusting all of his planned robberies to Craig’s memory, plans which could only be unlocked by Bath himself. Following his untimely demise Craig discovers that the plans for his uncle’s final and biggest robbery, the country would ever witness, are still locked away in his mind. Bath has also left a set of riddles which, if solved correctly, will unlock the intricate plan harbouring within his nephew.
This is no ordinary robbery - it is one which will leave you thinking... "Why the hell hasn't someone thought of that before?"

"...highly visual...like the Italian Job (the original)..." Gregory & Co. London.

A full novel of 78,000 words

The first novel from the author of the #1 horror-thriller The Facebook Killer.


No comments:

Post a Comment