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Paperback "The Thatcher Tapes": (Series 1, Book 9) Book

ISBN: B0GJ49JSFP

ISBN13: 9798245034300

"The Thatcher Tapes": (Series 1, Book 9)

"The Thatcher Tapes"
In the winter of 1988, a cassette tape changes hands on a park bench in London, and nothing is ever the same again.
Detective Chief Inspector Holloway is no stranger to secrets. She has chased them through Whitehall corridors, intelligence dead ends, and the quiet aftermath of investigations that were never meant to conclude. But when a former civil servant delivers her a tape implicating senior figures in illegal arms deals, routed through apartheid South Africa and tied to Cold War intelligence exchanges, the case pierces deeper than any she has faced before.
The tape speaks of embargoes ignored, of proxy wars supplied in silence, and of "rehearsals" conducted in York and Berlin. It also carries echoes of her brother's final assignment, an operation officially closed, a death officially settled, and a truth that was never meant to resurface.
As Holloway follows the paper trail through shipping manifests, shadow committees, safe flats, and international brokers, witnesses begin to die. Institutions close ranks. Intelligence services warn her off, then quietly move against her. What emerges is not a conspiracy of rogues, but an architecture of agreement: decisions made collectively, responsibility diffused, and accountability designed to fail.
When a final tape surfaces, her brother's voice recorded in confidence, it becomes clear that this was never about exposing one man or one crime. It was about revealing how power survives by insisting no one is ever fully responsible.
The Thatcher Tapes is a taut, atmospheric Cold War thriller about silence, statecraft, and the cost of continuity. It is a story of records kept, truths deferred, and a reckoning that London believed it could indefinitely be postponed.
It was wrong.

Author Bio

Wayne J. Gombar is a historian, policy analyst, and novelist whose work explores the intersection of state power, institutional secrecy, and the moral consequences of decisions made beyond public view. Drawing on decades of experience in public-sector systems and federal operations, his writing examines how bureaucracy, intelligence, and political continuity shape lives long after official narratives have closed.
His fiction is marked by meticulous period accuracy, restrained prose, and a refusal to simplify complex power structures into convenient villains. The Shadow Files series reflects his long-standing interest in Cold War legacies, intelligence tradecraft, and the quiet mechanisms by which accountability is deferred rather than denied.
Gombar's nonfiction and academic work similarly interrogate institutional harm, ethics of governance, and the human cost of administrative silence. He writes with an insider's understanding of how systems function, and how they protect themselves.
He lives and works in the United States.

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