Wednesday, 6 January 2016

On the Edge - you will be!

2016 has got off to a cracking start with On the Edge, by Michael Ridpath. The author has categorised this book as one of his "financial thrillers" and it certainly requires a bit of brain power on the part of the reader. It opens with our hero, Alex Calder, on a training exercise in his fighter jet. But things do not go according to plan and he is forced to eject seconds before a crash, injuring his back in the process. Once out of the RAF, Calder becomes a trader in the City and gets his adrenalin shots by gambling with vast sums of money. He earns big both for himself and the firm he works for. But the world of finance is full of men with enormous egos and no social graces. When colleague Jennifer Tan suffers one innuendo too many, she decides to pursue a case of sexual harassment against one such man, and is treated appallingly. When Jen commits suicide, Calder resigns in disgust. One year on, Calder is running a flying school when one of his former colleagues turns up to talk to him about "something big" but then backs off, leaving Calder with hints and inferences but no real detail. Within a week, this man has vanished on a business trip to see the boss of a huge, and controversial, investment fund. With suspicions now raised, Calder heads back into the world of finance to find out what really happened ... You have to keep your wits about you in this book which immerses the reader into the world of global finance and how easy it seems to be to bring a country to it's knees. Do not be put off by this, however, as On the Edge is a real page turner and keeps you guessing and wondering how Calder might, finally, come out on top. The one weakness, from my perspective, was that the female characters were not quite as rounded as the male ones. There was a great opportunity for two of them to have real gumption, but in the end, they were a bit on the fluffy side. Hey ho! I read the audio edition and thoroughly enjoyed the narration by the glorious Sean Barrett (he's one of my favourite narrators and I suspect that this was one of the reasons I bought this book).

STAR RATING: FOUR.

Length: 432 print pages.
Price I paid: £5.99.
Formats available: print (it's out of print but you should be able to get it second hand); unabridged audio download; ebook.

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