Let me tell you about The Key to Rebecca, by Ken Follett which I read as an ebook. It was gripping from the get go. With an incredibly evocative first line of "The last camel collapsed at noon" ... I was taken straight to the heat, dust and thirst of the desert and I just knew I was in for something special. It's 1942, and this is the story of the "Sphinx" (real name Alex Wolff), a German spy who arrives in Cairo with his radio transmitter and a copy of Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca. As his activities start to affect the course of the war in North Africa, one man is determined to catch him - Major William Vandam, an English intelligence officer. Egypt is a complex country, occupied by the British, but whose presence is resented by many of the local population. Rommel is out in the desert, bringing his panzers and troops nearer and nearer to Cairo, using the information provided by Wolff. Can Vandam save the country from being overrun? We have action, adventure, history, geography and a bit of romance thrown in for good measure. This is a great read - it zips along with vim and vigour and I found it hard to put down. If you like war time thrills and spills, this is definitely for you.
I had been getting a little dispirited with recent ebooks - but now I realise that this is not due to the format per se, but with the overwhelming temptation to download stacks of free books and give them a go. This is all very well, but there seems to be a fair amount of chaff before you get to any wheat! There are affordable gems in this format - and The Key to Rebecca is absolutely one of those (although I have noticed that the price has gone up since I purchased my copy). I have aleady downloaded another two Ken Follett books which were on offer this past weekend and I'm really looking forward to reading them.
My STAR rating: FIVE.
Length: 381 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.00 (was on offer the day I bought it).
Formats available: print; unabridged adio CD; unabridged audio download;
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