Top

We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

The Poison Tide

On sale

16th August 2012

Price: £10.99

Select a format

Selected: ebook / ISBN-13: 9781848545830

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

1915. German guns are on their way to Ireland. The British government faces its worst nightmare; insurrection at home while it struggles with bloody stalemate on the Western Front. A British spy, Sebastian Wolff of the new Secret Service Bureau, is given the task of hunting down its enemies: one a traitor reviled by the society that honoured him as a national hero; the other a German-American doctor who, instead of healing the sick, is developing a terrifying new weapon that he will use in the country of his birth.  Wolff’s mission will take him undercover into the corridors of power in Berlin, then across the Atlantic in a race against time to prevent the destruction of the ships and supplies Britain so desperately needs to stave off defeat.

Reviews

Scotsman
'Andrew Williams takes us very convincingly into the world of idealistic terrorists . . . The atmosphere of time and place is finely realised and the plot is compelling. Best of all, however, is the moral discrimination with which Williams presents his terrorists to us, showing how high ideals may be corrupted by whatever is perceived to be necessary'
Shots Magazine
'Exciting . . . an important book for devotees of the spy story'
British Fantasy Society
'A gripping thriller set in a world of treachery'
Allan Massie, Scotsman
'Two novels have established Andrew Williams as an outstanding writer of the historical thriller or spy story. The Poison Tide will only enhance his reputation. It is very good indeed . . . Compelling and smoothly engineered . . .You will be lucky if you come upon a more engrossing and enjoyable historical thriller this year. Or perhaps next year'
Sunday Times
'A first-class thriller . . . possesses a richess of characterisation and intelligence that few can match'
History Today
'A cracking read, a thriller that has heft . . . powerful and forthright'
Scotsman
'Williams is establishing himself as the master of this historical thriller in which real-life events and characters are given a fictional twist or gloss'
Getting Away with Murder, www.shotsmag.co.uk
'This is a very satisfying thriller on many levels. Above all, it's an intelligent thriller: brilliantly researched, superbly crafted and . . . well written'
www.sir-readalot.blogspot.co.uk
'Williams' knowledge of the time, combined with a talent for storytelling, means his historical thrillers are compelling and extremely enjoyable. Williams skilfully creates a character that is honest, ruthless and flawed . . . The Poison Tide is a thoroughly enjoyable read'
www.eurocrime.co.uk
'I really enjoyed this very exciting but fast-paced thriller, with intricately researched details . . . I was gripped until the final page. Well recommended'
Peterborough Telegraph
'This fine novel fuses fiction with real-life First World War events . . . It's multi-layered and gripping'
John Dugdale, Sunday Times
Praise for Andrew Williams: 'Williams contrives an appealing blend of Doctor Zhivago, Conrad's Under Western Eyes and Boris Akunin's 19th-century crime fiction. His ability to bring a past world to life matches Furst's'
Guardian
'This is a dense, meaty affair which pulls off the trick of gripping the reader and bringing a complicated, alien world to life'
The Times
'He blends historical fact and fiction in a vivid recreation of the world of The Idiot and Crime and Punishment'
Daily Mail
'Elegantly serpentine plotting and finely etched characters confirm his place in the front rank of the new English thriller writers'
Allan Massie, Scotsman
'A very accomplished novel which can be enjoyed as a gripping and moving thriller. Yet it is more than that, for it invites us to reflect on questions of morality, and on that age-old question of when, if ever, violent means may be held to justify worthy ends; whether, indeed, such ends can ever be achieved if the means are inescapably criminal'