Reviews
"A reformed legendary art-thief, Tom Kirk, bursts onto
the scene like a modern-day Raffles with a gun in his pocket.
An anti-hero who can be worse than the bad guys when necessary.
A story that harks back to the Nazis, Hitler, and a legendary
treasure. What more could you want?
If there's a better thriller this year I would like to see
it."
Jack Higgins, International bestselling author of
The Eagle has Landed
US Reviews
Art thefts, a missing train, Russian gangsters, secret identities
and plenty of blood and gore. There's something for thriller
fans of all types in James Twining's second novel, The Black
Sun.
In an author's note, Twining says he was inspired by the true
story of what has come to be known as the Nazis' Hungarian
Gold Train. U.S. military forces discovered it hidden in an
Austrian tunnel near the end of the war. It was packed with
billions of dollars' worth of stolen art, gold and other treasures.Twining
weaves history, legend and lore with his keen imagination
to tell his story.
Schwarze Sonne — Black Sun — was the name of a
secret order of the SS, a powerful military and security organization
active in Nazi Germany. The secret plottings of the elite
order are at the heart of this book, but the story takes place
in modern times.
In London, an Auschwitz survivor is murdered in a hospital.
The killers cut off his arm and take it with them. In Prague,
a seemingly unremarkable painting is stolen from a synagogue.
In Fort Meade, Md., a World War II-era Enigma machine used
for encrypting messages is stolen from the National Cryptologic
Museum.
The three incidents kick off a thrill-a-page story that has
the CIA, treasure hunters and neo-Nazis hunting for a missing
train said to be filled with priceless art treasures stolen
from Nazi-overrun countries during World War II. From London
to St. Petersburg and on to Munich, Zurich and Westphalia
in Germany, The Black Sun never loses speed — all the
way to the story's culmination in an abandoned mine in Austria.
The chapters are short and to the point, and always end with
some satisfying drama ... The Black Sun is pure, unadulterated
fun.
USA Today, November 2006
The author follows The Double Eagle (2005) with this equally
entertaining sequel. Around the world, thieves are committing
strange robberies and bizarre murders, all of them apparently
connected to World War II and Nazi Germany.
To solve the crimes, art thief turned investigator Tom Kirk
and his partner (and former fence), Archie Connolly, must
navigate their way through a labyrinth of devious clues left
behind by a supersecret Nazi group more than half a century
ago. At the end of the trail: a world-shattering secret and
a showdown with Tom's archnemesis.
As he did in The Double Eagle, Twining plunges into the story
on page 1 and rarely slows down until the finale. Fast paced
and exciting, with a -bigger-than-life villain, a conflicted
hero, and a solid payoff: What more does a thriller need?
Booklist - December 2006
"It was one of the greatest works of art ever made.
It must be worth hundreds of millions of dollars. What else
would have warranted Himmler assigning his most elite troops
to guard duty? What else would they have gone to such lengths
to conceal?" At this point, Tom Kirk, art thief
turned thief catcher, has unraveled the mystery that lies
at the center of THE BLACK SUN. He thinks.
Kirk is collaborating with the people "I don't trust...never
have. Never will." --- the British intelligence services.
To maintain his chosen lifestyle, always on the move and always
on the prowl, waiting for that lovely day when he can retire
to the Cayman Islands on his ill-gotten gains, Kirk is sometimes
forced to cooperate with the law. In this case, if the bloody
stump of sliced-off arm and an apparently worthless painting
lying beside it in his freezer weren't enough, there is the
intriguing possibility of catching up with missing pieces
of his past. Kirk believes that the man he is hunting can
tell him something important about his father, an international
art thief who died carrying secrets that continue to torment
Kirk.
We know that the British can write spy thrillers. They may
have invented the genre, beginning with one Bond. James Bond.
Bond's creator, a roué of the upper classes, had experience
in spy-craft during World War II. And there's John le Carre,
author and former practitioner of the craft of espionage.
THE BLACK SUN is the brain child of a new voice in the literary
art of intrigue. James Twining is an Oxford graduate and international
entrepreneur who has done his homework well, researching the
treasures that Kirk and the bad guys are out to recoup, and
cleverly connecting their factual history to fictional antagonists.
The legendary Hungarian Gold Train and the remarkable lost
Amber Room each plays a role.
When the arm is examined, Kirk and his Foreign Office minders
find that a tattoo has been surgically removed from it. Assuming
it to have been a concentration camp number, they reconstruct
the markings. What they uncover is far more puzzling, and
leads Kirk on the road to the inner sanctum of the Black Sun,
the perverted Nazi cult of Camelot. Always dogging the trail
of the elusive Renwick, who he believes holds the answers
to the mystery of his own father, Kirk finds that the treasures
stored up by the infamous cult reach far beyond the world
of great artworks. Despite extreme and constant danger, Kirk
is compelled to chase the demons of the past and confront
them. As the beautiful Viktor tells him, "You're angry,
like me. I can see it in your eyes."
THE BLACK SUN, the second in a series that started with THE
DOUBLE EAGLE, spans two continents and two centuries. It has
enough twists and switchbacks, grit, gore and glory to satisfy
the hardcore thriller fan, and enough historical detail and
cleverly conceived spy-craft to rope in the lovers of the
intellectual espionage genre.
Bookreporter - January 2007
If you enjoyed James Twining's action-packed art thriller
"The Double Eagle", you're sure to get a similar
charge from its sequel "The Black Sun".
Private investigator Tom Kirk (a former art thief) and his
partner (a former fence) look into an explosion of murders
and robberies around the world that seem to be connected to
the (true) story of the Hungarian Gold Train. The train was
loaded with a fortune in gold and art stolen from Hungarian
Jews and found in a remote Austrian tunnel by US troops at
the end of World War II. Some of it was returned, but in Twining's
version enough of it was hidden around the world to make it
all worth killing for 60 years later.
Chicago Tribune - December 2006
In London British MI6 operatives try to enlist the aid of
former CIA Agent Tom Kirk in a nasty situation involving three
brutal murder-robberies. Tom declines even as they describe
the murders at a synagogue in Prague, at a hospital in London
and a museum in Maryland. All were violent yet nothing of
seeming value taken. What were stolen was a worthless 1940s
painting, a Nazi camp survivor’s arm, and a WW II Enigma
machine. This doesn’t make sense except for the war
connection and the probable link to neo-Nazi supremacist group
Kristall Blade.
Tom agrees to help when he learns that his enemy from his
espionage days, Harry Renwick, is involved. Tom, accompanied
by two friends, begins following clues on two continents in
order to stop the Neo-Nazis and their allies from achieving
their objective, which he knows involves six decades old lost
gold and other treasures.
THE BLACK SUN is an exciting neo-Nazi thriller and sub-genre
fans will enjoy following the exploits of introspective Tom
and his cohorts. As with Kirk’s first novel, THE DOUBLE
EAGLE, the fast-paced story line blends historical tidbits
into a modern day mystery. Readers will enjoy James Twining’s
tense tale.
Harriet Klausner - December 2007
"A gripping and suspenseful story that takes historical
facts -- the Hungarian Gold Train and Himmler's SS -- and
weaves them into a modern-day hunt to find the secrets of
the past. This is a can't-put-down thriller."
The Seattle Post Intelligencer - March 2007
British / RoI Reviews
"James Twining's The Black Sun triumphantly proves that
his impressive debut novel, The Double Eagle, was no fluke.
This second outing for his engaging protagonist Tom Kirk
is actually more assured than the first one, and is proof
that the gameplan created by the author for his character
is spooling out very nicely indeed.
A whole year has passed since art thief Tom Kirk made a resolution
to abjure his criminal activities. But -it goes without saying
-he finds himself unable to entirely leave his old life behind.
Three major art thefts occur, while in London a survivor of
the death camps is killed in hospital. His murderers have
removed a grisly relic from the crime scene: the dead man's
left arm. Soon, Kirk finds himself drawn into a mystifying
(and highly dangerous) situation, with yet another element
complicating the already labyrinthine plot: a gang has broken
into the NSA museum and made off with a decoding machine.
Crime and thriller aficionados often play the game of defining
those two genres, and while there are significant crimes in
Twining's highly entertaining novel, it’s the thriller
format’s international dimension that adds an extra
vigour, an element Twining exploits with the brio that marks
out the very best thriller writers.
One senses a certain Dan Brown syndrome here (and that probably
won't do James Twining's sales any harm), but he remains very
much his own man, and if Brown has virtually hijacked certain
thriller motifs, that's no reason for other novelists not
to utilise them -particularly when they are as well handled
as they are in The Black Sun."
Amazon.co.uk official review (Barry Forshaw) - April
06
A reformed thief searches for a long-hidden secret, a series
of encrypted clues leading him from Czech synagogue to Swiss
bank to Russian art gallery... Yes it's all a bit Da Vinci
code but Twining is a better writer than Brown, albeit a less
ambitious one. He breaks no new ground here, but has produced
a satisfying variation on the treasure-stolen-by-evil-Nazis
formula that should keep the most jaded reader on their toes.
The body count is high, with a couple of mutilation scenes
thrown in to show us how bad these bad guys can be, and although
the ending feels a little forced, this is a pacey well-constructed
thriller with plenty of surprises and action.
What's on in London - November 2006
"James Twining's first novel, THE DOUBLE EAGLE, was
an instant hit, and pretty soon achieved best-seller status
with over 100,000 copies sold in the UK alone. THE BLACK SUN
continues the adventures of Tom Kirk, only this time, Kirk's
working for the British Secret Service as they try to uncover
the connection between a murdered SS officer and a number
of stolen WWII paintings.
You won't be disappointed - James is a master story-teller
and this is a sensational follow-up to a classic first novel
... This is straight out of a mould that begins with Boys'
Own Paper and continues to this day with cliffhanger chapter
endings reminiscent of Saturday Morning cinema - a fantastic
ride, a brilliant story ... This will be another number one
bestseller, and deservedly so.
Gateway Monthly - May 2006 (FICTION BOOK OF THE MONTH)
"Three vicious robberies, with murder, cause officials
to call in Tom Kirk, ex-CIA agent, ex-art thief, and his partner
Archie Connolly, a former fence, to help find out what happened.
The arm of an Auschwitz survivor is severed while he is still
alive in a hospital in London. The doctor and nurse who were
watching on the CCTV are murdered and the tape taken, along
with the arm. Meanwhile, at the NSA museum in Washington,
a guard is brutally hanged from piano wire and an Enigma machine
is stolen. Then, in the Pinkas Synagogue in Prague, a painting
by Karel Bellak is stolen, and children's holocaust art is
destroyed. Bellak is a minor amateur painter whose work is
usually not much sought after. The Rabbi asks Tom Kirk to
investigate and try to find who would desecrate a holocaust
remembrance exhibit.
When he finds the painting, the severed left arm is also
found with it. The juxtaposition is puzzling, but Kirk's young
assistant, Dominique de Lecourt, an inveterate puzzle solver,
figures out the arm contains a code.
At the end of the war, a train of 29 cars, loaded with treasures
from Hungary, was hidden by a group of diehard SS soldiers.
Twenty-seven of the cars have been found, but it is thought
that the two remaining cars hold a secret treasure that is
worth more than any that has already been recovered. Tom and
Archie search Europe for the treasure, and the road to finding
the lost railroad cars is an exciting one.
Twining is among the best of the thriller writers around.
He seems to be taking on the crown that Clive Cussler is slowly
abdicating, if THE DOUBLE EAGLE and THE BLACK SUN are indications
of his abilities. Oh, by the way, if you want to find out
the meaning of the title, you'll have to read the book."
Reviewing the Evidence - February 06
"James Twining’s follow up to his bestseller,
The Double Eagle, is an impressive novel that thriller lovers
will find hard to put down.
The second adventure of the sometime art thief, Tom Kirk,
starts off with a series of bangs – two murders, three
thefts (one of which involves the gruesome severing of an
arm) and the desecration of a holocaust remembrance exhibit
in a Prague synagogue. When Kirk is asked to investigate the
theft of a worthless painting by the Rabbi of the Synagogue,
he’s soon entering a world that leads to Neo-Nazis,
hidden wartime treasure and once again he's duelling with
arch enemy Cassius.
The style is very fluid and engaging, which allows the reader
to keep pace with the many threads in the story. The action
moves swiftly with well-crafted twists, turns and hooks. The
choice of locations is impressive and memorable. As a former
resident of Wapping, I enjoyed the scene in the Captain Kydd
pub by the river Thames. For me, by far the most engaging
character was Archie, former fence and Kirk’s partner.
But there’s a formidable array of characters and they’ll
all keep you guessing.
I’m already eagerly awaiting the next instalment in
the adventures of Tom Kirk. Don’t keep us waiting too
long James."
Shotts Crime and Thriller Magazine (Dreda Say Mitchell)
- April 06
"Tom Kirk is all you'd want in an anti-hero. Resourceful,
daring and unafraid of facing up to demons (his own and others).
Once a brilliant art thief, he's now given up the night job
and turned his not inconsiderable, if somehwhat dubious talents,
to disentangling problems on the dark side of life. What do
they say, set a thief to catch a thief?
Tom Kirk, the cracking new creation of author James Twining,
returns in this second thriller from a writer surely destined
to be one of our biggest success stories. This time out, Tom
is called in to solve three seemingly random acts of thuggery
across three different worlds.
An Auschwitz survivor is murdered in his London hospital
bed. His killers sever and steal the man's left arm. Across
the Atlantic, thieves make off with a second world war Enigma
machine and, in Prague, a minor painting is looted from a
synagogue. Link those to a secret order of SS Kinights and
you are en route to a real thriller.
A writer to watch? I think so."
Huddersfield Weekly News - May 2006
Author James Twining will be well known to readers from his
first novel, The Double Eagle, and on the heels of that thrilling
read comes The Black Sun.
This could be described as a tale of three cities - London,
Prague and Fort Meade, Maryland USA. The novel was inspired
by the incredible true story of the Hungarian Gold Train and
its desperate journey across a ravaged continent in the dying
days of World War II.
An Auschwitz survivor is murdered in his hospital bed and
the killer takes off with his left arm. In Maryland, a gang
breaks into a museum and takes a Second World War Enigma machine,
while in Prague, a worthless painting is stolen from a synagogue.
But what's the connection between all three? Enter former
art thief Tom Kirk who digs deep into the past where clues
have been laid down by a secret order of SS knights.
A thrilling read.
Cork Evening Echo - May 2006
"If you are going to have a conspiracy thriller, then
you might as well go for the old Nazi Fourth Reich storyline
- as long as it's good. And boy, is James Twining good.
Starting with the macabre murder of an Auschwitz survivor
in his hospital bed and finishing with an explosive confrontation
between the forces of good and evil beneath an Austrian mountain,
and taking in a secret order of SS kights and a fabulous treasure,
Twining has produced a thriller which races along at breakneck
speed. It combines murder with mystery and mysticism and has
more twists and turns than a government spin doctor.
Dan Brown eat your heart out."
The Northern Echo - April 2006
"Every good thriller needs a good baddie. And the more
twisted and nefarious the plot, the more heroic our hero becomes
when he does battle with evil.
In The Black Sun, Twining's found the 20th Century's shorthand
for evil - the Nazi SS - who have apparently left clues to
a treasure trove of stolen Jewish art and some ruthless killers
want their share of the loot.
Enter reformed art thief Tom Kirk and you have all that's
needed for a tale of daring do."
Nottingham Evening Post - April 2006
"The Black Sun is an enjoyable conspiracy thriller,
mixing historical possibilities with fictional improbabilities
to good effect.
Tom Kirk used to be the world's leading art thief. Nowadays,
he's on the right side of the law - whenever possible.
In this, his second outing, he and his friends race around
Europe trying to locate a fabled art treasure from World War
II. They'll need to keep moving if they're to get there before
assorted neonazis and unscrupulous art collectors - and, indeed,
before being killed, if at all possible."
The Morning Star - April 06
"Former art thief Tom Kirk makes a return in The Black
Sun by James Twining.
Kirk investigates after an Auschwitz survivor is murdered
in his hospital bed, his killers making off with a macabre
trophy - his severed left arm. In Fort Mead, Maryland, a gang
breaks into a museum and steals a second world war Enigma
machine, lynching the guard who happens to cross their path.
While in Prague, a mindless anti-Semitic attack on a Synagogue
culminates in the theft of a seemingly worthless painting
by a little known Czech artist. Something links them, but
what and why?
The Black Sun has all the ingredients for a blockbuster -
Nazis, hidden treasure, conspiracies and codes."
York Evening Press - May 06
Australia / NZ Reviews
"Join the dots hidden in some old paintings to find
clues to long-lost Nazi treasure and just hope the neo-Nazis,
the FBI or Russian gangsters don't get there first. Another
in The Da Vinci Code genre, in which former art thief Tom
Kirk and his associates whiz across Europe, sometimes ahead
of the game, sometimes just behind it. They get there in the
end, though, along with the bad guys, and the treasure is
a bit of a surprise."
The Daily Telegraph - Feb 06
"Death is not as fatal as it used to be. At the end
of Twining's last foray into the genteel world of international
murder and mayhem, The Double Eagle, the identity of a big
art crook called Cassius was disclosed...
... In The Black Sun, Twining takes us into the charming
company of a group of former Nazis who think that the Third
Reich might be worth another shot. But first they need to
round up the artworks of a little-known Jewish painter, knock
off the enigma machine and sever an arm from an old man. Kirk
is now on the side of virtue; he is going to lock horns with
Cassius.
Twining is a natural entertainer. If it wasn't a bit over
the top it would have been written by somebody else."
The Sydney Morning Herald - Jan 2006
"A great read, this book had me engrossed from the start.
The lead character Tom Kirk is a very likeable person and
you soon find your self caught up in his world.
You don't need to be a fan of war time thrillers or thrillers
that relate back to the war to enjoy this book. It's a fast
ride with lots of plot twists and turns, but you never find
yourself lost because the author's writing style keeps you
informed and involved during the whole journey.
I liked this so much that half-way though I went out and
bought his other book, The Double Eagle, which is also turning
into a great read!! I hope to see more books with the further
tales of Tom Kirk soon."
Parmenion Books - January 2006
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