<p>'‘A classic locked-room mystery, but set on the polar ice-cap’ Lee Child</p>
<p>Admirably written – one gasps and freezes and burns with the frightful cold'<br />Sunday Times</p>
<p>'Hair-raising! MacLean had done it again' Manchester Evening News</p>
From the acclaimed master of action and suspense. The all time classic.
400 miles north of the Arctic Circle, an airliner crashes in the polar ice-cap. In temperatures 40 degrees below zero, six men and four women survive.
For the members of a remote scientific research station who rescue them, there are some sinister questions to answer – the first one being, who shot the pilot before the crash?
Then, with communications cut and supplies running low, the station doctor must lead the survivors on a desperate bid to reach the coast, knowing all the while that there is a ruthless enemy in their midst, someone working to accomplish their destruction.
• Originally published in 1959, MacLean’s fifth novel is a classic Cold War thriller with a stunning new package.
• Reissued as part of a major repackaging of the key MacLean backlist titles.
• This volume is part of a new effort to re-establish Alistair Maclean as the UK’s foremost writer of thrillers and wartime adventures.
• Alistair MacLean’s books have sold over 30 million copies worldwide
• Many have been turned into award-winning blockbuster films, including The Guns of Navarone, Where Eages Dare, The Satan Bug and Ice Station Zebra
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Alistair MacLean, the son of a Scots minister, was brought up in the Scottish Highlands. In 1941 he joined the Royal Navy. After the war he read English at Glasgow University and became a schoolmaster. The two and a half years he spent aboard a wartime cruiser were to give him the background for HMS Ulysses, his remarkably successful first novel, published in 1955. He is now recognized as one of the outstanding popular writers of the 20th century, the author of 29 worldwide bestsellers, many of which have been filmed.