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Death
In A Cold Climate
A Guide to Scandinavian
Crime Fiction

by Barry Forshaw

Published Jan 2012
Available
from Amazon

Crime Time is edited
by Barry Forshaw


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WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: Thrillers Including Simon Khoury And Simon Kernick
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Jeremy Jehu gets all het up about the latest batch of thrillers

news: A Night Of Crime In Belgravia
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On Wednesday February 8th, come and hear three of the UK's finest crime writers discussing their work at Belgravia Books in the heart of London.

review: Bereft By Chris Womersley
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news: John Hawkes Takes The Lead In Jackie Brown Prequel The Switch
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feature: Mark Billingham And Paul Johnston In Conversation
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news: Century Buys Chatterton Crime Debut
www.amazon.co.uk

Century has acquired two novels in a new procedural crime series by author Ed Chatterton, billing it as "gritty, dark, visceral and utterly gripping".

The Armageddon Trade Clem Chambers
Mark Campbell

So much for escapism.

Clem Chambers' debut novel The Armageddon Trade makes the Credit Crunch seem like a blip on the financial radar. Bankers being Public Enemy Number One, it's no surprise to find Chambers - a stocks and shares CEO - warning us that the apocalypse will be caused by the same highly paid gamblers who have got us all in our current fiscal mess. But while monetary meltdown is a fact, the events of The Armageddon Trade are much more in the realms of 'speculative fiction'. If H G Wells were still on the scene, no doubt he'd be penning something like this.

It's the very near future (actually post-credit crunch, so maybe not so near) and über-trader Max Davas is shocked to discover his computer models telling him in a year's time every tradable commodity will be worthless. Gold, oil, wheat, coffee - everything zero dollars.

Meanwhile in a London Dockland banking house, ex 'teaboy' Jim (AKA Ken, short for Kenco) dazzles his colleagues with an instinctive ability to predict the future. And he's just as worried as Davas.

Part science-fiction, part Grisham thriller, The Armageddon Trade plays out its doomy prophecies with unerring skill. And while the myriad computer tech-speak clearly excites the author more than his readers, there is no doubting he knows what he's talking about. The prose is basic, the characters predictable, but the story's the thing here, and it's a real page-turner.

File it under the same heading as Alex Scarrow's Last Light and pray Chambers isn't as prescient as he thinks he is.

Mark Campbell

The Armageddon Trade

Clem Chambers

No Exit Press, £10.99, 9781842432983

Posted at 11:24AM Sunday 29 Mar 2009

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