Diamond for a Ruby by Stefan Nicholson (Amazon Print) PB RRP AU $5.00
(Kindle), AU$20.00 (Print) ISBN 9780648295334
Reviewed
by Sam McNeil
This is a stand-alone
spy-thriller book for the cross-over market that follows on from Nicholson’s
first self-published book, Spy within a
Ruby.
Set in England, the
book begins with Ruby Peters, a M16 agent, in a pub paying tribute to her
former boss, Roger Davis, when the barman slips her a note. It is from Davis who
speaks from the grave with a coded message. Not knowing her drink is spiked, Peters
returns home in a drunken state. From there she is arrested and taken to M16
where she is accused of murdering her friend Ilya Kasparov, a senior foreign
agent, who is in fact a double agent. Thereafter Peters is in danger, fighting –
with the help of her partner, Eric -- double-agents entrenched in MI6 who
recruit mercenaries and a psychotic madman to kill her. Peter’s friends are
injured and killed because of her involvement with Davis and she is betrayed by
her own people.
There are numerous
problems with this novel not the least of which is that it needs a good
structural and copy edit. The narrative viewpoint shifts constantly and at
random, and the story climax comes about two-thirds in with the remaining third
about planning a wedding for someone Ruby hated at school. At times an unknown
bad guy drops in an internal monologue. Notwithstanding this, there is a lot of exposition and telling the reader how the
characters are feeling. Even the formatting of the book is problematic: there
are no indented paragraphs, just blank lines between paragraphs.
One must admire an
author who puts in so much effort and expense in writing and publishing his
book, but this story could have been so much better if he had employed an
editor and book designer.
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