May 30, 1944. In the middle of the night, Libby Clark is roused from sleep by a colleague in distress. Marvin’s cousin Frannie has been charged with treason, and he hopes that Libby, with her clear-headed scientific mind, can help prove her innocence. Libby, a chemist at a secret military facility in Oak Ridge, Tennessee is committed to pursuing the truth wherever it takes her.
Libby soon uncovers the immoral Dr. Hansrote, who has tricked Frannie into her treachery. But the evil at Oak Ridge runs deeper. And Libby not only finds herself in conflict with the authorities, but also caught in the crosshairs of a deadly cabal of spies, profiteers, and unscrupulous collaborators.
Can Libby survive the confluence of challenges? Or will one of them fashion a trap she cannot escape?
Treason in the Secret City is the second book in the Libby Clark Mysteries, which also includes Scandal in the Secret City and Sabotage in the Secret City.
“This sequel to Scandal in the Secret City, which has some basis in fact, is faster-paced than Fanning’s debut while maintaining the 1940s atmosphere.” —Booklist
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Release date
September 1, 2018 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781780107776
- File size: 875 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781780107776
- File size: 1433 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
June 13, 2016
At the outset of Fanning’s clunky sequel to 2014’s Scandal in the Secret City, Libby Clark, a chemist who’s part of a secret government program in Oak Ridge, Tenn., to enrich uranium, is awakened one night in the spring of 1944 by one of her colleagues, Marvin Gray. The bashful Marvin, a fellow member of a select group of do-gooding scientists called the Walking Molecules, confides that a cousin of his, Frannie Snowden, who works as a switchboard operator at Oak Ridge, has been accused of giving secrets to the enemy. Convinced of Frannie’s innocence, Marvin asks Libby to help clear Frannie’s name by investigating the man who duped Frannie into participating in seditious acts. Things turn grim when Marvin goes missing. Dodging the authorities while hiding Frannie and trying to winkle out a spy leads to disastrous results for Libby and the Walking Molecules assisting her. An interesting setting is unable to rescue the story from its unconvincing plot, cardboard characters, and stilted dialogue. Agent: Jane Dystel, Dystel & Goderich. -
Kirkus
June 1, 2016
The secret World War II-era nuclear experiments carried on at Oak Ridge, Tennessee, provide ample incentives for spying--and ample opportunities for amateur sleuths.Scientist Libby Clark may still be fighting sexism in the mostly male environs of Oak Ridge, but she's gained the trust of several male colleagues who respect her opinions and talents as part of the group they call the Walking Molecules. So it's only natural that her colleague Marvin Gray wants her to help his cousin Frannie Snowden, who he fears is about to be arrested for treason. Marvin claims that Frannie, a none-too-bright telephone operator, was convinced by Dr. Edwin Hansrote to put secret calls through her switchboard to a number in New York City. When Frannie listened in on a call, she realized that Hansrote was not receiving information but passing it on. Now Frannie's hiding in a derelict cabin deep in the woods. When Marvin fails to show up for work, Libby and her pals search the woods and find his badly beaten corpse tied to a tree. They help Frannie escape to a hotel in town, where she pretends to be the wife of a group member while the rest of them try to figure out how to prove that Hansrote is a spy. The pressure cooker of suspicion that permeates the facility makes it nearly impossible to know whom to trust. A major crisis in her family forces Libby to visit her old home in Virginia and brings back bitter memories, but her friends carry on the investigation until she returns to them and to even greater danger. This sequel to Scandal in the Secret City (2014), which has some basis in fact, is faster-paced than Fanning's debut while maintaining the 1940s atmosphere and emphasizing the difficulties of wartime life, especially for educated women.COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
subjects
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- English
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