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Conquest

By: Nina Allan
Narrated by: Gyuri Sarossy, Sarah Lambie
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Summary

An investigation of the human need to make connections, to find causes and effects, however fantastic, Conquest is the story of a disappearance, and of the mystery that follows.

Rachel's boyfriend Frank is different from other people. His strangeness is part of what she loves about him: his innocence, his intelligence, his passionate immersion in the music of JS Bach. As a coder, Frank sees patterns in everything, but as his theories slide further towards the irrational, Rachel becomes increasingly concerned for his wellbeing. There are people Frank knows online, people who share his view of the world and who insist he has a unique role to play. In spite of Rachel's fears for his safety, Frank is determined to meet them face to face.

When Frank disappears, Rachel is forced to seek help in the form of Robin, a private detective who left the police force for reasons she will not reveal. Like Frank, Robin is obsessed with the music of Bach. Like Frank, she has unexplained connections with the criminal underworld of southeast London.

An obscure science fiction story from the 1950s appears to offer clues to Frank's secret agenda, but not to where he is. As Robin and Rachel draw closer in their search for the truth, they are forced to ask themselves if Frank's obsession with an alien war, against all logic, might have a basis in fact.

Nina Allan's novel is a work of the greatest imaginative power, an investigation of the human need to make connections, to find causes and effects, however fantastic. Conquest is the story of a disappearance, and of the mystery that follows.

©2023 Nina Allan (P)2023 Quercus Editions Limited
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What listeners say about Conquest

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Excellent

Genuinely brilliant exploration of the liminal spaces between genius and madness, conspiracy and make believe. I guess it's really about choice - what we can choose and what we can't. What we see and what is real. Intelligent and erudite, I loved every word of it.

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Exhilarating and cathartic

A fascinating delve into the boundaries between reality, conspiracy, and unbridled imagination. The use of recurring themes (Bach, science fiction novellas, online forums) beautifully weaves a clever tale for the post-Covid era.

The performance by two presenters is effective and convincing, providing even further distinction between various characters' accounts and personalities. My single critique is for the chapters listed on Audible. The majority of chapters are either misspelled ('Shecone' rather than 'Chaconne') or incorrect ('Query' should instead be 'Quarry'). It's a minor detail, but would be good to have sorted out.

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