An undercover operative heads to the island paradise of Tahiti to prevent a nuclear nightmare in this novel by “the John D. MacDonald of espionage fiction” (Larry McMurtry, The New York Times).
Freelance agent Joe Gall is supposedly monitoring French atomic testing near the Pacific island of Tahiti. But that’s just a cover. His real assignment: disrupt the budding relationship between De Gaulle and the Red Chinese. The plan is to kidnap one of the leading French scientists, sabotage the test—and prevent annihilation . . .
“I admire Philip Atlee’s writing tremendously.” —Raymond Chandler
Philip Atlee (1915–1991) was the creator of the long-running Joe Gall Mysteries, which is comprised of twenty-two novels published in the 1960s and 70s. Born in Fort Worth, Texas, Atlee wrote several novels and screenplays—including Thunder Road starring Robert Mitchum, and Big Jim McLain starring John Wayne—before producing the series for which he is known. An avid flyer, he was a member of the Flying Tigers before World War II and joined the Marines after the attack on Pearl Harbor.