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Book review: To Kill the Truth

History is a burning issue in the latest book from Sam Bourne

February 25, 2019 15:32
to-kill-the-truth
1 min read

To Kill The Truth — the latest in Sam Bourne’s series featuring heroine Maggie Costello (Quercus, £12.99) — is far from perfect but it speaks to its time in a way few read-in-a-single-sitting Dan Brown-esque thrillers do.

Shoah survivors are dying in mysterious circumstances. Someone is burning down the world’s leading libraries, one by one, expunging their digital archives and depriving the world of more history each time.

Ex-White House aide Costello alerts the FBI and the world’s governments but none seems to know how or why it is happening. At the same time, a man is suing a historian for calling him a “slavery denier” and uses the trial as a platform to claim that one of the darkest parts of American history is a myth. Every lost library brings him closer to seeming right.

The book explores how and what we remember are conscious choices that define us. It’s exactly the sort of novel you’d expect a journalist (Sam Bourne is the pseudonym of Guardian and JC columnist Jonathan Freedland) to write, when millions swallow fake news and the powerful deny what everyone can see with their own eyes.