Spiral is an elite and secret organisation
created to be the last bastion against terrorism. In a world
torn apart by war and plague, Spiral fights to keep civilisation
alive. Now, however, Spiral itself is under attack and it
is up to a few battle-scarred men and women to stop Spiral
and even civilisation from disappearing.
If you were thinking that this is a novel in
which you need to suspend belief - then you would be only
half right. This is a novel with a plotline so divorced from
reality that even Oprah Winfrey wouldn't be able to reconcile
them.

Now, I don't mind a dose of unreality but for
it to work the writing needs to be intoxicating, needs to
weave and flow sweeping you away from the reality of this
world into the reality of the plot. This doesn't.
The writing is about as subtle as a builder
on a building site and about as original. Bullets smash, brains
stir, bodies slam and clichés roll down the pages.
The Science Fiction in this novel seems to serve merely as
a device to make the characters' life easier.
There certainly doesn't appear to be any creation
of a future world or of a background to the future that Spiral
inhabits. Important events that would help you to understand
characters or the plot were merely hinted at making me think
that this will be part of a sequence of books or that Andy
Remic wasn't sure of what these events were.
The language and plot would almost be forgivable
if this was a book that offered something new or had a fresh
angle on a subject that affects us today, such as the policing
of the world.
However, the main message of this novel seems
to be: take the usual stock of thriller characters, sprinkle
liberally with sexism and gratuitous violence and finally
garnish with a spurious Science Fiction angle and you, too,
can create a tired, jaded, cliché ridden book like
‘Spiral’.
Katie McGivern