Book description
Got you.
The sight of the bomb hit Felix like a punch in the guts.
Just twelve minutes remaining on the clock . . . He was going to
have to move fast.
Following a devastating terrorist bomb attack on Heathrow airport,
Felix Smith is determined to avenge his father's death.
He successfully becomes a member of the Minos Chapter, a secret
service full of gifted under-age recruits. His speciality - Bomb Disposal.
Felix and his fellow recruits are now the ultimate spooks - trained
to fight terror with terror. The timer is ticking . . . .
Stephen (aka Steve) Cole has established himself as a highly
versatile commercial writer for all age groups, his Astrosaurs
series has become a UK top-ten children's bestseller and his YA
thriller trilogy Thieves Like Us has been published in a number
of languages. Also an expert in TV and film tie-ins, he has provided
novelisations, non-fiction titles and original fiction for properties
such as Shrek and Doctor Who. His most recent project
for RHCB - Z. Rex - was sold pre-publication to Dreamworks
Animation for film. Stephen graduated with first class honours in
English Literature and Film Studies from the University of East
Anglia. He then spent four years editing and writing children's
magazines for the BBC, managing a team of twelve before working as an
editor in various publishing roles. Stephen lives in Buckinghamshire,
England, with his wife and two children.
Chris Hunter is the author of Eight Lives Down, a
riveting first person account of a high-threat bomb disposal tour -
the world's most dangerous job in the world's most dangerous place. He
joined the British Army in 1989 at the age of sixteen. He was
commissioned from Sandhurst at twenty-one and later qualified as a
counter terrorist bomb disposal operator. He served with a number of
specialist counter terrorism units and deployed to numerous
operational theatres, including the Balkans, Northern Ireland,
Colombia, Afghanistan and Iraq. Seconded to COBR-A as an IED and
suicide terrorism expert, he played an instrumental role during the
July 2005 London bombings. In early 2007 he retired as the MOD's
senior IED intelligence analyst to become a writer and Counter
Improvised Explosive Device consultant. For his actions during his
Iraq tour he was awarded the Queen's Gallantry Medal by HM Queen
Elizabeth II. His citation read: 'There can be few other individuals
who have so willingly played Russian roulette with their own life to
safeguard the lives of others.'